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All public schools and many private schools in Bangladesh follow the curriculum of NCTB. Starting in 2010, every year free books are distributed to students between Grade-1 to Grade-10 to eliminate illiteracy. [6] These books comprise most of the curricula of the majority of Bangladeshi schools. There are two versions of the curriculum.
Now even national curriculum books from class 5 to class 12 are distributed freely among all students and schools. The educational system of Bangladesh faces several problems. In the past, Bangladesh education was primarily a British modelled upper-class affair with all courses given in English and very little being done for the common people.
Primary (Grade I to Grade V), Junior (Grade VI to Grade VIII), Secondary (Grade IX to Grade X), Higher Secondary (Grade XI to Grade XII) January (Grade I to Grade X), July (Grade XI to Grade XII) Bashir Uddin Adarsha High School and College Mirpur Syllabus Dhaka Education Board 1968 Boys and Girls (Grades 1~10); Co-Educational (Grades 11~12)
Dhaka – 1207, Bangladesh. Cambridge curriculum 1912 Kindergarten to A Levels International School Dhaka: Plot-80, Road-9, Block-E, Dhaka-1229 IB curriculum 1999 Playgroup to Grade 12 (IB Diploma) Apple Tree INTERNATIONAL School : Plot C-11-13/1 Road 1/1, Block Ka & Kha, Mirpur 2, Dhaka 1216 Cambridge curriculum 2019 Playgroup to O Level
The automotive industry in Bangladesh is the third largest in South Asia. Bangladesh has a few large car plants which assemble passenger cars from Mitsubishi and Toyota, as well as commercial vehicles from Hino and Tata. Motorcycles, auto rickshaws and the locally designed Mishuk three-wheeler are manufactured in Bangladesh.
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K.C. Nag's books from class 4–12 are the books which the students aspiring to excel in every walk of life had depended on at some time or other for the past three generations. Tridibesh formed a board consisting of eminent professors, school teachers, examiners, and successful students in order to revise the book from time to time.
The education boards of Bangladesh have provided the result based on GPA (grade point average), which depends on each subject average grade point (GP). Marks above 80 will count as GP 5.00 or A+, while marks above 70 will count as GP 4.00 or A.