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Education

Panel to select teachers for BBMP schools

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The Hindu      06.12.2010

Panel to select teachers for BBMP schools

Staff Reporter
The special committee will help choose the right candidates: B.V. Ganesh

‘Standing Committee for Education is taking steps to improve quality of education'

‘We have launched mobile laboratories and distributed workbooks to SSLC students'


Bangalore: The Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) is likely to constitute a special panel to recruit teachers and lecturers for the civic authority's schools and pre-university colleges.

The civic authority's Standing Committee for Education is considering a proposal to set up a panel comprising professors from the Indian Institute of Science and the Indian Institute of Management.

Committee chairperson B.V. Ganesh said that the panel will help choose the right candidates.

This, Mr. Ganesh said, would help improve the quality of education imparted at the BBMP-run education institutions.

He said that the Standing Committee, since it was formed more than a month ago, has been initiating various measures to improve the quality of education.

“Recently, we launched mobile laboratories and distributed workbooks to all the students appearing for the Secondary School Leaving Certificate (SSLC) examination in this academic year,” he said.

He also said that recruiting qualified teachers and lecturers would go a long way in improving quality of education at the BBMP schools and colleges.

He said that more than half the sanctioned posts of assistant teachers, headmasters, vice-principals, principals and lecturers were vacant. Of the 914 sanctioned posts in the 136 educational institutions, 496 posts are vacant.

“The panel members will help us gauge the quality of the applicants. We want to appoint qualified and committed teachers in our institutions. We hope to fill at least 300 posts by getting the panel screen the candidates,” he said.

A large number of the posts have been filled with outsourced teachers, who hold a B.Ed. degree.

These teachers get paid Rs. 7,200 a month, compared to the Rs. 15,000 that permanent teachers get.

The salaries of permanent teachers are fixed according to the Department of Public Instruction's approved scale.

According to information available, the five sanctioned posts of headmasters at the primary schools are all vacant.

There are 292 vacancies for assistant teachers' posts in the 33 high schools, followed by 99 in the 78 pre-schools and 93 in the 12 primary schools.

 

MCD to install portable cabins in its schools

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Hindustan Times  06.12.2010

MCD to install portable cabins in its schools

The Municipal Corporation of Delhi will install 125 makeshift cabins in its primary schools across the city, where the students study in tents. The education department of the civic agency took the decision to provide “porta-cabins” in those schools which will take more than six months to finish construction.

According to the chairman of MCD Education committee Mahender Nagpal, a process has also been initiated to procure 20 more porta-cabins.

He said the MCD has, so far, constructed 645 classrooms this year in 45 primary school complexes. “Besides this, construction is ongoing in 41 municipal primary school, which is expected to be completed within three-nine months, after which the students will not have to study in tents,” he said.

Nagpal also said that the engineering department has been asked to speed up the construction process and to remove construction waste immediately after dismantling the old portions of the buildings that are dilapidated and could not be used for school structure.

The civic agency will also disburse R15 crore within the MCD school students who belong to the scheduled caste and scheduled tribe. The money will come as a R1,000-scholarship for each student.

According to officials, about 1.5 lakh students will become the scholarship beneficiaries and the provision for it has been made out of Non-Plan Fund. 

The MCD runs 1,746 primary schools with about 9.5 lakh children on rolls. In addition, the civic agency also runs attached nursery classes in 923 primary schools, along with 33 independent nursery schools with enrolment of 50,000 children.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 07 December 2010 11:31
 

Civic body school board gears up to set up first civic military school

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Indian Express  03.12.2010

Civic body school board gears up to set up first civic military school

A civic school with facilities of horse riding, swimming pool, gym and firing range that usually form part of a military school curriculum would soon become a reality with the school board of the Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC) stepping up efforts to set up a Municipal Sainik School. The school would impart military training to children urging them to join the Armed Forces.

With the location finalised near the Katraj bypass on Mumbai-Bangalore highway, the school would be spread over 3.5 acre, 2.5 acre of the which has already been acquired. Proposed in 2006-07, the construction work is expected to begin in January and expected to complete by mid-2012.

“Though the school was proposed four years ago, it took some time for the approvals, land identification and acquisition. We have finalised 3.5 acre plot by the side of the Mumbai-Bangalore bypass near Wonder City and 2.5 acre has already been acquired,” said Sangeeta Tiwari, chairperson, School Board, PMC.

The PMC has sanctioned Rs 1 crore for the construction of the premises that would include academic area consisting of labs, classrooms, computer labs, library along with administrative block, dining area and so on. The military amenities on the lines of Sainik School would include firing range, gymnasium, badminton hall, horse stable, swimming pool and so on. “The plan also includes hurdle track, rope climbing, 200-metre track, climbing wall and so on. The future plan would also include hostels, commandant’s and officers residences and so on,” said architect Vishwas Kulkarni who has been working on the project.

With retired defence personnel as the training staff, the school board plans to limit the intake to 50 students per year from Class V to 10. “It would be a residential school like any other military school and the norms followed would be those at the PMC schools. We have received a nod from the Education Board but we would be pushing for the funds as Rs 1 crore is insufficient for a military school,” added Tiwari. The city currently has 281 municipal schools in 162 buildings across the city.

Last Updated on Friday, 03 December 2010 10:00
 


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