Manish Sisodia visits govt school, interacts with students
Press Trust of India | March 29, 2022 | 11:21 PM IST | 1 min read
Delhi deputy chief minister Manish Sisodia visited a government school in Jahangirpuri and admonished an official for not ensuring adequate hygiene on the premises.
Also read | JEE Main 2022: Previous year's NIT cut-offs for BTech mechanical engineering
Sisodia, who holds the education portfolio visited Sarvodaya Kanya Vidyalaya in D- Block, Jahangirpuri. He spoke to the students about academic activities and their experiences of studying new curricula -- the Happiness Curriculum and the Deshbhakti Curriculum.
Also read | Allow medical students from Ukraine to join medical colleges in India: Chandrasekhar Rao to Narendra Modi
Also read | AICTE announces supernumerary seats for gifted students, Covid orphans in technical institutions
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- Experts propose 7 spots for university townships in education ministry’s post-budget webinar
- Primary school teachers in Karnataka must serve 12 years before promotion, say new recruitment rules
- JNU, TISS Mumbai, BHU: Student unions vanish from universities with elections scrapped, councils taking over
- Students in University of Aberdeen, Mumbai, get credential exactly the same they’d get in Scotland: COO
- ‘IIMC to upgrade all journalism and mass communication courses to MA degrees, phase out PG diplomas’: VC
- Rebuilding Calcutta University: VC Ashutosh Ghosh’s priorities are recruitment, fixing finances, reforms
- PARAKH’s Foundational Learning Study 2026 to cover 1 lakh Class 3 students across 10,000 schools
- Telangana: Government Degree College Vikarabad moves out of school and into DIET campus
- ‘Shouldn’t open universities like shops’: Odisha higher education expands but students rue plummeting quality
- Dual degrees, faculty exchange: States bet on foreign university tie-ups, but fine print tells another story