33 secondary schools declared unauthorised in Thane district
Press Trust of India | August 5, 2020 | 04:44 PM IST
THANE : As many as 33 secondary schools, including two civic-run institutions, in Maharashtra's Thane district have been declared unauthorised by the Thane Zilla Parishad, an official said on Wednesday.
Notices have been sent to schools, which have been classified as unauthorised and managements have been ordered to shut these institutions, education officer (secondary) Seshrao Bade has said in his order.
These schools have been asked to give compliance report to the Zilla Parishad education department, the official release stated. Of the 33 unauthorised schools, 18 are English medium, three Hindi and the rest are Marathi medium schools, while the list also includes two civic-run schools, it was stated.
Also read:
Why it took Kerala’s Elambra 35 years to get a primary school
NEP 2020: New standards and training on online tools for teachers
Write to us at news@careers360.com .
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.
Featured News
]- MBA courses in healthcare management, hospital administration growing popular
- ‘Our online MBA courses have a 80-90% completion rate’: upGrad MD
- ‘Jamia Hamdard’s BMS course is industry-driven; saw 80-85% placement’: Dean, School of Management
- IIM Ahmedabad, Kozhikode, Lucknow: Top MBA colleges take the lead in school leadership training
- For IIM Ranchi, commitment to tribal issues is a ‘social responsibility’
- ‘I’ve seen students delivering food’: Expert on Canada’s study visa policies and why demand may drop 50%
- How online MBA courses at top management schools are enabling career transitions
- Happy Children’s Day 2024! Take this quiz to test how much you know of child rights and education in India
- MBA Pharmacy: How AI, data science and technology are reshaping the industry, boosting career options
- What happened to the NExT exam? Only 31% medical students know exam pattern, says study