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Government Girls Commerce and Arts College: Malir: Government Girls Science and Commerce College: North Nazimabad Town: Government Girls Science College: Shah Faisal Town: Government Islamia College for Women: Jamshed Town: Government Karachi College for Women: Saddar Town: Government PECHS College for Women: Jamshed Town: Government SMB Fatima ...
Government College for Women Shahrah-e-Liaquat, also known by its former names including Vasant Pathshala School, Carneiro Indian Girls High School, and Central Government College for Women, Karachi, (Urdu: گورنمنٹ کالج برائے خواتین شاہراہ لیاقت) is a women's college located on Burns Road, Karachi, Pakistan.
Sir Syed Government Girls College is considered as one of the most premier educational institutions for girls in Karachi. The college was founded by Syed Altaf Ali Barelvi [1] in 1954 solely to provide higher education to girls. The college has been named as Sir Syed Girls College after the leader Sir Syed Ahmed Khan. The present building of ...
Bakhtawar Cadet College for Girls is the first girls' cadet college in Pakistan.Founded in 2010, it is jointly run by the Government of Sindh and the Pakistan Air Force. [1] [2] [3] The cadet college was established in 2010 and is named after Mai Bakhtawar Lashari Shaheed, the first woman to die in the history of peasant uprisings in Sindh in 1947.
Govt. Degree College Phool Nagar, Kasur (Girls) Rana Liaquat Ali Khan Government College of Home Economics, Karachi; Sir Syed Government Girls College; Ghazali Inter College, Bhawana; Government College for Girls, Peshawar Road, Rawalpindi; Royal Education & Law College Arifwala; Hira Girls College Bhoun Road Chakwal; Peshawar College for Girls ...
The Quota system in Pakistan was established to give every region of the country representation in institutions according to their population. The Quota System was first introduced in Pakistan in 1948 [1] [2] [3] The Civil Service of Pakistan selects only 7.5% of the applicants by merit, education, qualification and experience.
The college was nationalised in 1972 and denationalised in 2005, and returned to the Catholic Board of Education. On the 23 March 2009, the Government of Pakistan awarded the college principal, Sister Mary Emily FC the Sitara-e-Imtiaz, which she received from the Governor of Sindh. This was in recognition of her services to education. [5]
Pak-Turk Maarif International Schools & Colleges is a chain of private international educational institutes under the umbrella of Turkish Maarif Foundation. Established in 2018, for the promotion of literacy in Pakistan, Pak-Turk Maarif has 27 branches in Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Lahore, Karachi, Khairpur, Multan, Jamshoro, Peshawar, Hyderabad and Quetta, with a total student population of more ...