Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Non-Government Teachers' Registration and Certification Authority was established in 2005 by the Government of Bangladesh. [1] [4] [5] It holds annual Teachers Registration Examinations in Bangladesh. In 2017, 527,757 candidates took the examination and 147,262 of them passed.
The project was placed under the Local Government Division. The Birth and Death Registration Act 1873 and Births, Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 1886 were repealed. A new Birth and Death Registration Act was passed in 2004. The law allowed local government bodies and Bangladesh embassies abroad to register births and deaths.
Non government teachers contribute six percent of their salaries to the trust for a retirement fund that will be available to them after retirement and with additional funding from the government of Bangladesh. In April 2019, the government increased it to ten percent which was protested by the Bangladesh Shikkhak Union, a teachers union. [8 ...
This consolidation SAM was designed to "reduce the burden on those seeking to do business with the government." [1] In addition to eliminating redundancies and streamlining processes, SAM provides a single help desk to resolve issues with any of the databases. [2] The systems combined into SAM are listed below, grouped by functional area.
Non-Government Employee Retirement Benefits Board was established in 2002 to provide and manage the pensions of non government teachers. [2] After retirement teachers receive welfare and retirement benefit from the board. According to the rules of the board teachers retire at 60 and can start receiving their benefits.
Dr. Muhammad Qudrat-e-Khoda Commission Report in 1974 recommended that the government of Bangladesh form a separate bureau within the Ministry of Education to collection information on education in Bangladesh. The bureau was modelled on the Central Bureau of Education.
The authority must approve and evaluate all skill development projects of the government. [2] [3] The chairperson of the governing body of the National Skills Development Authority is Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus and the vice-chairperson is Minister of Finance Salehuddin Ahmed. Executive Chairman (Secretary) is Nasreen Afroz. [4]
Bangladesh Nursing and Midwifery Council traces its origins to Indian Nurses Act. 1934, East Pakistan Nursing Council, which was established in 1952 as a regulatory agency on nursing services and education. In 1971, following the Independence of Bangladesh, East Pakistan Nursing Council was renamed to Bangladesh Nursing and Midwifery Council ...