Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This article about government in India is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
It was created in 2002 to address the problem of dropouts at the primary level and meet the emerging demand for non-formal basic education with functional literacy and livelihood skills. The department is working in collaboration with Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) and United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF).
The re-construction of the Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education, Lahore has been done through the Punjab Boards of Intermediate and Secondary Education Act 1976 (lately amended by Punjab Ordinance No.XLVII). Currently, nine Boards are functioning in the Punjab province at division level.
The education system in Lahore is formulated along specific modern, religious, cultural, social, psychological, commerce and scientific injunctions. Lahore is Pakistan’s largest producer of professionals in the fields of science, technology, IT, engineering, medicine, nuclear sciences, pharmacology, telecommunication, biotechnology and microelectronics. [1]
The School Education Department is a division of the Government of Punjab, Pakistan. legislating, formulating policy, and planning for primary, middle, secondary and higher secondary education and maintain standards of education in these fields. [1]
COMSATS Institute of Information Technology (Lahore campus) - BS-CS; Bahria University (Lahore campus) - BS-CS, BS-IT; Government College University, Lahore - BS-CS; National University of Computer and Emerging Sciences; Lahore College for Women University - BS-CS; National University of Computer & Emerging Sciences (Lahore campus)* - BS-CS
Professor S. Mercado was appointed the first principal. At the time of Partition, most of the college staff and students migrated to Lahore, where a new MAO College was established with the same pattern and mostly same staff, in the former Sanatan Dharma College premises, which in turn moved to Ambala. [citation needed]
The University of the Punjab, established 1882 in Lahore, is the oldest university of Pakistan. According to UNESCO's 2009 Global Education Digest, 6% of Pakistanis (9% of men and 3.5% of women) were university graduates as of 2007. [21] Pakistan plans to increase this figure to 10% by 2015 and subsequently to 15% by 2020. [22]