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Education

Girl students of NMC high schools to get money for bicycles

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The Times of India           05.02.2014

Girl students of NMC high schools to get money for bicycles

NASHIK: The Nashik Municipal Corporation's (NMC) education department will give money to select girl students of municipal secondary schools to purchase bicycles. The proposal is likely to be cleared in a week.

The civic body had shortlisted around 519 beneficiaries for bicycles under a scheme of the women and child welfare department.

Deputy municipal commissioner (education) Dattatreya Gotise, who is also the administrative in-charge of the Woman and Child Welfare Department said, "We will give money to the beneficiaries on purchase of the bicycle. The management committee of the school including the parents and teachers association and the headmaster/headmistress will be in charge of this. The money will be handed over after the student will show them the new bicycle and the payment receipt."

Earlier, the civic body taken a decision to purchase the bicycles and then give it to beneficiaries. However, they have now decided to give the amount for the bicycle to the beneficiary. The civic body had made a budget provision of Rs 35 lakh this year to provide bicycles to its girl students studying in high school and living outside the radius of three kilometres from the school. The NMC had initiated a survey in August to identify beneficiaries for the scheme.

Speaking about the change in the decision, an NMC official said, "The process got delayed because many changes had to be made in documents. Now if we buy the bicycles and hand it over to the girls, it will take more time. If they are to buy them, they can do so by their choice."

Assistant municipal commissioner (education) Vasudha Kurnawal said that each beneficiary will be getting around Rs 3,000 for the bicycle. "The girls should be able to buy good quality bicycles. We have identified 519 beneficiaries and have already completed all the formalities," she said.

 

GVMC grind for better SSC result begins

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The Hindu              28.01.2014  

GVMC grind for better SSC result begins

G.V. Prasada Sarma

With about 35 per cent of students lagging behind and under pressure to improve the SSC result, the GVMC is planning to introduce intensive residential coaching to students of civic schools.

After the inclusion of Anakapalle and Bheemunipatnam in the corporation, GVMC has 29 schools from which 1,935 students will take the SSC examination in March. With an SMS system in place for informing attendance, time of leaving the school and performance in weekly and other tests, parents are in regular touch with headmasters and teachers. Headmasters assess that a certain percentage of students either being poor in studies or being chronic absentees are unlikely to get through the examination.

There are also problems like teachers post being vacant in the schools. Of the 715 posts, 38 secondary grade and 60 school assistant posts are vacant. Some headmasters have asked for SGTs being posted there to tide over the difficulty and nine SGTs have been posted, says Additional Commissioner P. Poornachandra Rao who is in charge of education.

To help students face the examinations better, GVMC has been giving them answer books covering all the questions. “Besides, separate books on each of the subjects are also being provided this year to help them do better,” said.

The students have been categorised into A, B, C and D depending upon their performance.

In the 2012-13 the SSC pass percentage was 70, about 2 per cent less than that of the previous year. It, however, fell much below the district average of 82 per cent.

To help students in C and D categories special classes are conducted in the morning for one-and-a-half hours and in the evening for three hours. During the evening classes, snacks are also provided to them.

The classes have already begun and will continue till March 20.

 

Civic body to scrap School Excellence Programme

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The Indian Express               20.01.2014

Civic body to scrap School Excellence Programme

Mumbai 

At the start of the new academic year on June 14, NGOs attached to BMC’s School Excellence Programme (SEP) will begin the process of handing over the management of 148 civic schools currently under their care to the civic body.

This is following the civic body’s decision to discontinue the programme on account of the “poor improvement” in students’ performance till 2012. The project had begun in 2010 in partnership with UNICEF to tackle deteriorating education quality and attendance rates in civic schools.

“We have asked NGOs working in the programme to create an action-plan for a one-year hand-holding programme with us, which will end before our takeover of the programme in 2015-2016 academic year. NGOs will impart skills to teachers and administrators and train them to carry forward the model for better quality education,” said civic education committee chairman and BJP corporator Manoj Kotak.

The five-year programme covers 148 Urdu and Marathi medium schools, although it was initially to cover a total of 1,327 civic schools in Mumbai. It included participation from organisations such as McKinsey & Co and the Michael & Susan Dell Foundation and was expected to include music and fun-based activities in teaching techniques. Other areas covered under the programme were teacher and headmaster training, identifying a proper activity-based methodology (pedagogy), reducing administrative and paper work for teachers and headmasters, as well as systemising the NGO participation at the municipal school level.

In July 2013, the project proposed for acquiring funds worth Rs 6 crore for extending the programme by a year. The NGOs named in the proposal which was up for renewal in the committee meeting included : Nandi (which handles the civic urdu medium schools), Kaivalaya, Rishi Valley, and Students in Teaching. Apart from these, some of the other names attached to the project are Teach for India and Aakansha. At the meeting, civic officials said data on the performance of students enrolled in these schools showed a rise by about 12 per cent in two years. The committee, however, denied approval for extension on the grounds of NGO Praja’s annual report on BMC schools that pegged the drop-out rate in civic schools at more than 17 per cent.

“Such a minor increase in the performance-rate of students is not enough considering the amount of funds and resources BMC pumped into the programme. The SEP has not even created a new syllabus for the schools, instead they have designed a supporting syllabus for which the civic administration has been made to provide the basic services such as printing materials, questions etc. Moreover, at every school, the civic body has appointed a Shikshan Sahayogi (educational assistant) to carry out most of the work for the NGOs. If we anyway are going to do so much, why are we still engaging NGOs when results are not up to the mark?” said Kotak.

Last Updated on Monday, 20 January 2014 06:09
 


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