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  2. Education in Nepal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_Nepal

    Before Nepal was declared a democratic country, the general public had no access to formal education. The first formal school, Durbar High School, established by Jung Bahadur Rana in 1854, was intended for the elite. The birth of Nepalese democracy in 1951 opened its classrooms to a more diverse population. [4]

  3. Durbar High School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Durbar_High_School

    The school was later shifted to Thapathali Durbar with an Englishman called Kenning as its first teacher. Named Durbar School (palace school), it marked the beginning of modern education in Nepal, but only the ruling Ranas and their sons could attend it. In 1876, the school began admitting children of high class government officers too.

  4. Shree Amarsingh Model Higher Secondary School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shree_Amarsingh_Model...

    Plus two level is affiliated to HSEB (Higher Secondary Education Board) while school level is under Government of Nepal. [5] The school was awarded as Model Higher Secondary School in 2004 A.D, Best National in 2006 A.D, Regional Best Community Higher School in 2005 A.D, 2007 A.D, 2008 A.D. [6] Science, Management, Education and Humanities are ...

  5. Adarsha Vidya Mandir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adarsha_Vidya_Mandir

    AVM Higher Secondary School is one of the oldest and largest schools in Nepal. It was established in 1966 in Manbhawan, Lalitpur , by educator Satya Narayan Bahadur Shrestha. It has won several awards for its excellent results in national level examinations held by the Higher Secondary Education Board of Nepal.

  6. Motiram Bhatta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motiram_Bhatta

    Motiram Bhatta (Nepali: मोतीराम भट्ट; 1866–1896) (1923–1953 BS) was a Nepalese poet, singer, essayist, publisher, literary critic and biographer. [1] [2] He is considered the first biographer and literary critic of Nepali literature and is credited for starting the first private printing press in Nepal in c. 1888. [3]

  7. Kanjirowa National School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanjirowa_National_School

    Kanjirowa National Higher Secondary School is an independent, co-educational institution located at Koteshwor, Kathmandu, Nepal. It was founded as Kathmandu Don Bosco High School in 1998. The school provides classes from 1 to 10.

  8. Budhanilkantha School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budhanilkantha_School

    This is intended to maintain the school's high academic standards. [3] Out of 118 students who took the School Leaving Certificate Examination 2014, 103 secured Distinction and the remaining 15 students passed in the First Division. [4] Budhanilkantha School was the first school to introduce GCE Advanced Level in Nepal. [5]

  9. Bhupi Sherchan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhupi_Sherchan

    Sherchan is considered the pioneer of free verse poetry in Nepali literature. [12] Prof. Michael J. Hutt published Sherchan's biography, The life of Bhupi Sherchan: Poetry and Politics in Post-Rana Nepal in 2010. The biography also contains Sherchan's poems translated by Hutt into English.