West Bengal: TET 2022 qualified aspirants protest over delay in primary teacher recruitment
Press Trust of India | August 19, 2025 | 03:32 PM IST | 1 min read
Aspirants blocked traffic and marched to APC Bhawan, demanding immediate interviews and recruitment for nearly 50,000 vacant primary teacher posts. Demonstrators cited unfulfilled government promises and expressed frustration over years of waiting despite clearing TET 2022.
NEW DELHI: Teaching job aspirants staged a demonstration in Salt Lake on Tuesday, urging the state government to immediately start the recruitment process for vacancies in primary schools. The demonstrators claimed that though they cleared the Teachers' Eligibility Test (TET) 2022, the TMC government has failed to start the recruitment process, with nearly 50,000 primary teachers' posts lying vacant.
Several aspirants were detained at the gate of Karunamoyee metro station, but some dodged the police and started the demonstrations. Braving rain, the demonstrators began their march from outside the metro station around 1 pm for the APC Bhawan, the headquarters of the West Bengal Board of Primary Education. While many carried placards with their demands written on them, some also wore masks of Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee.
Also read Bihar STET aspirants protest in Patna; demand exam before TRE 4
Within a few minutes, on-duty police personnel detained them, bundled them into waiting buses and whisked them away. Traffic was disrupted at the busy Karunamoyee crossing as many demonstrators blocked it briefly. "Our demand is simple -- issue the notification for interviews and recruit us immediately. There are around 50,000 vacancies, but the government has kept us waiting for years," said a demonstrator. Another aspirant said, "The CM promised that no TET-qualified candidate would remain unemployed, but that promise has not been kept. It feels like we are being deprived deliberately."
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- SAT, PSAT Exams: How College Board is expanding access to global education
- ‘It affects NUJS image’: Students complain of campus decay, demand VC ouster over harassment case
- New H-1B visa fees may have ‘negative’ impact on domestic placements at engineering colleges
- West Bengal: After 10-year wait for school jobs, Lepcha teachers now unpaid for 3 months
- GRE, TOEFL exams opening global education doors for students: ETS country manager
- Nursing ‘especially popular’ with Indian students at University of East Anglia’s School of Health Sciences
- Online, hybrid programmes have ‘broadened the MBA degree’s appeal’: GMAC regional director
- As the sector matures, international schools must support public schooling: TAISI chair
- AI reducing mediocrity in art, write Sir JJ School of Art, Architecture and Design faculty
- Bayer India expert: Freshers jobs now more about skills than degrees; AI, ML rarely taught effectively