The National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 marks a groundbreaking transformation in India’s approach to education. Anchored in holistic, inclusive, and flexible learning principles, the policy ...
The ‘No Detention Policy’ re-introduced under the Right to Education Act (2009). This had earlier prohibited schools from holding back students in these grades regardless of academic performance.
But his long life was full of intersections with education policy and a personal history with the nation’s struggles over race and schools. These are highlights of Carter’s life and record of ...
Muscat: The Board of Directors of Indian Schools Oman has decided to implement the new National Education Policy (NEP) of India across all schools in the Sultanate of Oman. As per NEP, the academic ...
The US Mission in India issued over one million non-immigrant visas in 2024, reflecting growing Indian interest in travel, education, and professional opportunities in the US, alongside significant ...
The National Education Policy (NEP), which will be fully implemented over the course of this decade starting from 2021-22, will have a strong focus on high-quality vocational education. Under the ...
How Improving Education Could Close Maternal Heart Health Gaps Jan. 15, 2025 — Research has established a clear link between racial and ethnic disparities in maternal heart health and higher ...
Language policy is no exception ... bilingual approach seeks to bridge — recognising that inclusive education must challenge complacency if it is to deliver genuine social mobility and national ...
Jan. 16, 2025 — In an interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary study, an international team examined the social risks for Arctic regions associated with thawing permafrost. They identified five ...
We’ve previously written about state prescription drug affordability review boards (PDABs) that have been instituted around the country, often with the intent to review higher-cost prescription drugs ...
It comes five years after the Right to Education Act, 2009, was amended in 2019 to include a clause that allowed the “appropriate government” to decide on holding back children in Classes 5 and 8.