Before you pay a single rupee of B.A.B.Ed, B.Sc.B.Ed or B.Ed fees for the 2026-27 session, confirm in writing that the college actually holds NCTE recognition to run that exact programme this year. The National Council for Teacher Education (NCTE) has been moving teacher-training courses towards the four-year Integrated Teacher Education Programme (ITEP), and a Gazette notification dated 03.07.2025 extended the timeline for this transition before the start of session 2026-2027. That single sentence is why you must check now: courses are shifting, and a recognition slip should never be taken on trust at an admission counter.
Walk through these before you hand over any fee. You can literally do this standing at the desk.
If every step checks out, keep your copies safe. If anything is fuzzy, do not pay yet. The RTI route below lets you confirm the same facts from NCTE itself.
ITEP stands for Integrated Teacher Education Programme. It is a four-year integrated course that combines a bachelor's degree with teacher training in a single programme, instead of the older pattern of doing a degree first and a separate B.Ed afterwards.
NCTE has framed regulations to move existing combined courses into this new structure. Its regulations page lists the “ITEP (Amendment) Regulations 2024 dated 31.1.2024 regarding transition of the B.A.B.Ed./B.Sc.B.Ed. to ITEP”, and the “Gazette Notification dated 03.07.2025 extending the time-line for transition into ITEP before start of session 2026-2027”.
Read those titles carefully, because they say exactly what is happening and no more. There is a transition into ITEP, and the timeline for it was extended before the 2026-2027 session begins. That is the verified position. Anyone telling you a specific old course has been abolished on a specific date should be asked to show you the government paper that says so. Do not accept a rumour as a reason to pay or not to pay.
NCTE is a statutory body and a public authority under the Right to Information Act, 2005. That means you, as a student or parent, can file an RTI application with NCTE, or with the relevant Regional Committee, and get an official answer about a college. NCTE works through four Regional Committees, the Eastern, Northern, Southern and Western Regional Committees, each covering a group of states.
These are the questions worth asking. Keep them factual and specific to your college.
File the application with the standard RTI application fee. A public authority must ordinarily respond within 30 days. If the reply is unsatisfactory or does not come, you have a right of first appeal, and after that a second appeal to the Information Commission.
If you have never filed an RTI before, The RTI Playbook walks you through wording the application, paying the fee and following up.
A refusal is itself information. A genuinely recognised college has the order and usually shows it without fuss.
The dependable proof is always the recognition order plus NCTE's own confirmation. A prospectus, a website banner, or a confident salesperson is not proof.
The verified position is only what the notification titles say: there is a transition of B.A.B.Ed and B.Sc.B.Ed into ITEP, and a Gazette notification dated 03.07.2025 extended the timeline for that transition before session 2026-2027 starts. Whether a specific college is still running a specific course this year is exactly what you should confirm with the college in writing and, if needed, by RTI to NCTE. Do not rely on a general claim either way.
Start by asking the college for its NCTE recognition order and reading the programme name, session and validity on it. The most reliable independent check is to file an RTI with NCTE or its relevant Regional Committee asking whether the institution holds recognition for that programme for 2026-27, and to request a copy of the order. Treat a refusal to show the order as a warning sign.
This article does not assert what happens to any individual degree, because that depends on facts you should confirm from primary sources. What you can control is the risk: verify recognition before you pay, so you are not relying on a course the college may not be authorised to run. If a college cannot show a valid recognition order for your programme and session, that is reason enough to pause and use the RTI route.
Ask whether the named institution holds recognition to run your exact programme for the 2026-27 session, ask for a copy of the recognition order with its validity period and sanctioned intake, and ask whether any show-cause or withdrawal-of-recognition proceeding is pending against it. Keep the questions specific and factual.
Under the Right to Information Act, 2005, a public authority is ordinarily required to reply within 30 days. If you get no reply or an incomplete one, you can file a first appeal, and after that a second appeal to the Information Commission. Keep copies of your application and the postal or online receipt.