Educational institutions should work to enhance confidence among students: Haryana minister
Mool Chand Sharma said the government has opened 36 new colleges in the state of Haryana.
Press Trust of India | March 25, 2023 | 08:37 PM IST
GURUGRAM: Haryana Higher Education Minister Mool Chand Sharma Saturday said educational institutions should work to enhance confidence among students besides imparting quality education.
Self-confidence is a major factor in being successful, Sharma said, addressing the annual function of the DPG Institute of Technology and Management here. He also urged the students to strive to become job givers more than not job seekers.
The minister said the Haryana government has opened 36 new colleges in the state and work is also being done to improve the infrastructure of 177 colleges. He inaugurated a new building of the college and honoured meritorious students.
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
]- TISS: 115 contract teachers, other staff can stay till March 2026; Tata Group will fund salaries
- Studying abroad is about ‘taking responsibility’, growth and adaptability, says Macquarie University student
- AYUSH Counselling: Open school, private students eligible for BHMS
- Analysis: What the new UGC regulations on recruitment mean for academics, from assistant professor to VC
- Draft UGC rules draw flak as teachers oppose removal of contract staff cap, mandatory PhD for promotion
- Draft UGC regulations lift cap on contract teacher hiring, tighten control on VC appointments
- Close to 40 lakh students are enrolled in 1 lakh single-teacher schools: UDISE Plus 2023-24
- How did 1.88 crore children, over 17,000 schools vanish from UDISE Plus? The ministry must explain: Expert
- Why teachers are worried about semester system in West Bengal primary schools
- Universities need new AI, evaluation policies: Jindal Global Law School student who sued over results