All posts tagged: classrooms

Inside Gurgaon’s private equity-backed schools: Why firms are investing and how classrooms are changing | Delhi News

Inside Gurgaon’s private equity-backed schools: Why firms are investing and how classrooms are changing | Delhi News

In 2024, two private equity (PE) and venture capital veterans — Piyush Gupta and Norbert Fernandes — set out to build a new investment firm, Kenro Capital, at a time when artificial intelligence (AI) had become the industry’s most overused buzzword. They started with a quieter, almost philosophical question that has been echoing through boardrooms and venture circles as AI accelerates its reach: In a rapidly changing AI-driven world, what are the things that will not change? The premise was not that AI would reshape everything — but that it would come close. The real challenge was identifying the rare corners of life that would remain stubbornly human. “One answer that stood out was high-touch businesses like schools. People will always send their children to schools,” Fernandes says. With this conviction, Kenro Capital invested roughly Rs 340 crore in K12 Techno Services Private Limited at the end of 2024, best known for its flagship chain, Orchids: The International School. And Kenro Capital is not alone in making that bet. Across India, private equity firms are …

Karnataka permits hijab in classrooms, withdraws 2022 uniform order | Bangalore News

Karnataka permits hijab in classrooms, withdraws 2022 uniform order | Bangalore News

1 min readBengaluruMay 13, 2026 07:27 PM IST The Karnataka government has withdrawn the 2022 order which banned hijabs in classrooms. On Wednesday evening, education minister Madhu Bangarappa said that the students are allowed to wear, along with prescribed uniforms with “limited traditional and practice based symbols.” Disclaimer: We do not own any of the content, ideas, images, or text presented here. All rights belong to their respective owners. For more information and to view the original source, please visit the following link: Source link

Paneer paratha, sparse classrooms, meditation room: A university in India, but with ‘a very Australian flavour’ | Ahmedabad News

Paneer paratha, sparse classrooms, meditation room: A university in India, but with ‘a very Australian flavour’ | Ahmedabad News

Jayam Patel, 23, had completed a one-year postgraduate diploma in computer studies and was aiming for a “foreign education experience” in the United States after earning a master’s degree from Gujarat University last year, until he read about the “volatile employment situation” there. His parents, too, considered it risky for him to go abroad. For them, Deakin University came as a timely answer. Barely 30 kms away from where he lives in Ahmedabad, the institute offers the cybersecurity course, which Jayram had been wanting to pursue with a foreign university to enrich his resume, he tells The Indian Express. The grey box-like building opens into the first offshore teaching campus of an international university in India. Launched in 2024 with 42 students, who graduated in March, the campus is located in Gujarat International Finance Tec-City (GIFT City) in a special economic zone (SEZ). Visitors must present their IDs at the security desk near the entrance, which opens into a space with a colourful wall and where the Tricolour and the Australian flag stand side by …

Dhurandhar: The Revenge craze reaches classrooms; Rehman Dakait, Hamza, Jameel Jamali make surprise entry in exam paper

Dhurandhar: The Revenge craze reaches classrooms; Rehman Dakait, Hamza, Jameel Jamali make surprise entry in exam paper

The growing frenzy around the Aditya Dhar-directed Dhurandhar: The Revenge, starring Ranveer Singh, has taken an unexpected turn, with the film now moving from cinema screens to classrooms. A social media post that appears to be an accounts examination paper inspired by characters from the film has captured widespread attention online, tickling social media users. A screenshot of an alleged Account exam paper featuring the names of the Dhurandhar characters has appeared online. Image of an accounts paper with Dhurandhar characters goes viral The image shows what appears to be a question paper filled with references linked to the film. The caption of the post read., “Dhurandhar itni viral hai, Accounts wale sir bhi fan nikle, (Dhurandhar is so viral, Accounts sir is also a fan now)”. The exam paper in question featured multiple references to characters, turning a typically serious subject into something far more engaging. One section reportedly mentioned, “Rehman died on 5th December 2025.” Other questions included names such as Hamza Ali Mazari, Rehman Dakait, and Uzair Baloch, adding a cinematic touch …

From shanties to classrooms: The decade-long mission bringing migrant children into education fold in Bengaluru tech hub | Bangalore News

From shanties to classrooms: The decade-long mission bringing migrant children into education fold in Bengaluru tech hub | Bangalore News

Hidden behind the glass facades of global IT parks in Bengaluru’s Outer Ring Road, hubs that generate over Rs 4 lakh crore in export revenue, lies a different world. In Bhoganahalli, down a mud path, 300 tin shanties house over 1,000 migrant workers. These are the security guards, delivery agents, and domestic workers who keep the city running on salaries of Rs 15,000 to Rs 30,000 a month. But for their children, the “language barrier” and a “hand-to-mouth” existence have long made education an impossible dream, not anymore. Since 2015, the Gubbachi Learning Community, founded by five alumni of Azim Premji University—Joseph Deyone, Nomita Sikand, Preethy Rao, Rizwan Ahmed, and Somya Nand—and their associate Manimakalai Raja, has been working to ensure that these children are not left behind. At their Bhoganahalli resource centre, 40 children are currently enrolled in a bridge programme. By the 2026-27 academic year, at least 20 of them will transition into formal government schools. Through a combination of initiatives, including state government involvement, the Gubbachi Learning Community has since 2015 enrolled …

Pen, paper and brain: Why writing by hand still matters in the age of screens | Technology News

Pen, paper and brain: Why writing by hand still matters in the age of screens | Technology News

4 min readFeb 3, 2026 08:02 PM IST Handwriting is making a comeback in classrooms, reopening a long-running debate over cursive and whether it still has a place in an age dominated by screens and keyboards. After years of declining use, cursive is being reintroduced in some school systems, including New Jersey, which recently passed a law requiring students in grades three to five to learn the flowing, connected style of handwriting. The move places the state alongside more than 20 others in the US that have revived cursive instruction over the past decade, even as many countries continue to move deeper into digital education. Supporters of cursive argue that putting pen to paper does more than produce neat handwriting. They say it plays an important role in how children learn, think and remember. Critics, however, see cursive as outdated, questioning whether it deserves classroom time when typing is now a basic life skill. As the so-called “cursive wars” continue, scientists are offering new insight into what actually happens inside the brain when children write …

Lighter school bags, classrooms without ‘backbenchers’: Kerala’s new lesson plan

Lighter school bags, classrooms without ‘backbenchers’: Kerala’s new lesson plan

The aim behind the proposals is to ensure happiness of children by reducing the weight of the bags they carry to school and to create a learning environment without ‘backbenchers’ as part of “democratisation” of classrooms. (file image for representation) | Photo Credit: RAGU R Students trudging to school burdened with a heavy backpack and the presence of ‘backbenchers’, often associated with children who don’t engage in studies, were accepted scenarios in the education sector, but maybe not for long in Kerala. A draft report proposing a reduction in weight of school bags and creating classrooms without ‘backbenchers’ has been approved by the State Curriculum Steering Committee, General Education Minister V. Sivankutty has said in a statement. According to him, the aim behind the proposals is to ensure happiness of children by reducing the weight of the bags they carry to school and to create a learning environment without ‘backbenchers’ as part of “democratisation” of classrooms. The minister further said that the State Council of Educational Research and Training (SCERT) was tasked to study these …

Explained: How Kerala wants to reduce school bag weight, abolish ‘backbenchers’ in classrooms

Explained: How Kerala wants to reduce school bag weight, abolish ‘backbenchers’ in classrooms

Kerala government’s education department has approved the draft report on measures to reduce school bag weight. The state government’s Curriculum Steering Committee has also decided to take steps to abolish the concept of backbenchers from the next academic year Making these annoucements on Thursday, Kerala’s General Education and Labour Minister V Sivankutty said these two reforms are being taken to bring qualitative changes in the state’s general education sector. The proposed measures focus on reducing the weight of school bags to ensure the physical and mental well-being of students, and creating a classroom environment without ‘back benchers’ as part of the democratisation of classrooms, an official statement by the department cited by news agency ANI said on Thursday . Earlier, the State Council of Educational Research and Training (SCERT) had been entrusted with studying these proposals in detail. Based on this, reports were prepared and discussed in detail at today’s State Curriculum Steering Committee meeting. The committee subsequently approved the draft report. “We want to make the schools more child-friendly and democratic. Accordingly, there is …

Air purifiers to be installed in 10,000 classrooms: Delhi Education Minister

Air purifiers to be installed in 10,000 classrooms: Delhi Education Minister

Delhi Education Minister Ashish Sood on Friday announced that air purifiers will be installed in 10,000 classrooms to ensure clean air for the students. Addressing a press conference, Sood said that the government is committed towards tackling the problem of pollution through long-term administrative measures. “We are not those who flaunt IIT degrees and do campaigns like Odd-Even or Gaadi On, Gaadi Off campaign. We are tackling the issue of pollution through long-term administrative measures,” he said, taking a dig at the previous Aam Aadmi Party government. He added, “We want our children to study smart and also breathe smart air. In the first phase, air purifiers will be installed in 10,000 classrooms.” The minister, who also holds the urban portfolio, said the Public Works Department, using the environment cess, will also procure mechanical road sweepers for each of the assembly constituencies. This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole …

Govt outlines plans to push skills training into classrooms

Govt outlines plans to push skills training into classrooms

New Delhi: The government on Monday outlined its plan to bring vocational training into mainstream schooling under the National Education Policy. The push is meant to give students earlier exposure to workplace skills and create clearer pathways between short-term training and higher education, skill development minister Jayant Chaudhary said in a written reply in the Lok Sabha. The union minister said vocational subjects are now being offered in more than 25,000 schools nationwide, with enrollment of over 35 lakh students, and added that a hub-and-spoke model has been introduced so that schools without workshops can use the facilities of nearby hub schools The ministry has also set up 1,200 vocational labs in Navodaya Vidyalayas and Eklavya schools to address the gaps in lab infrastructure that had slowed the rollout of NEP’s mandate of vocational exposure from grade six, Chaudhary told the Lower House. Districts with weak job markets and low college access stand to benefit the most, he said. In Odisha’s Kandhamal, for instance, 61 schools have already introduced skill courses under Samagra Shiksha and …