Often, private coaching centres, with flashing hoardings advertising topper students, invite parents to enroll their children with the promise that the latter will benefit from the institute. With the hope that their children will excel in academics, parents do enrol them, but end up falling for disappointing services and methods of teaching.Trilok Chand Gupta (41), a Bengaluru resident, found himself in a similar predicament after he received a leaflet from a coaching institute that offered good results for his daughter. Convinced by the centre’s promise that his daughter would score 80% in Class IX, he signed her up for coaching and paid Rs 69,408.
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