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The Karnataka Secondary Education Examination Board, officially renamed as, Karnataka School Examination and Assessment Board, abbreviation as KSEAB, is a state education board of Karnataka. KSEAB came into existence in the year 1966.
It was established in 1969 by G.O.Ms.No. 63, Education (W-2) Department, Dated: 16-01-1969. The Directorate of Government Examinations, A.P., is a Head of the Department (HOD) under the Administrative Control of the School Education Department, Government of Andhra Pradesh, and is responsible for conduct of various major and minor examinations.
To avoid this, the Karnataka Public Schools (KPS) were started to facilitate learning in the premises of a single educational institute from 1st standard to undergraduate level. These schools were converted from existing pre-university colleges into public schools. [2] The government set up 176 schools in 2018–19 and another 100 in 2019–20. [3]
SSLC is a common eligibility examination popular in many states in India, especially Kerala, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu. The SSLC is also called Secondary School Certificate (SSC) in Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Maharashtra and also as High School Certificate (HSC) in Madhya Pradesh and also as Matriculation in many states of India.
To maximize attendance, the Karnataka Government has launched a midday meal scheme in government and aided schools in which free lunch is provided to the students. [ 5 ] At the end of secondary education, the students pursuing the Class 10th have to pass an examination called the Secondary School Leaving Certificate (SSLC)or Secondary School ...
Pratibimba is a dashboard that showcases the performance of the government of the Indian State of Karnataka.Launched with the aim to improve efficiency in governance and allow citizens to track the government's progress, it has tools to report, track and measure departmental performance on governmental programmes, projects and promises made.
The primary and secondary school education is administered by the government and supplemented by private schools, under the School Education Department of the state. [37] [38] The language of instruction followed by schools are English, Telugu, Kannada and Urdu.
Following the announcement from the Medical Council of India that it would introduce the NEET-UG exam in 2012, several states including Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Gujarat, West Bengal and Tamil Nadu strongly opposed the change, stating that there was a huge variation in the syllabus proposed by the MCI and their state syllabi.