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The educational system in Nepal was long based on home-schooling and gurukulas. [4] This was similar to the former Indian system of education, in which the pupils would learn either in their own homes or with reputed priests or Gurus. Before Nepal was declared a democratic country, the general public had no access to formal education.
Himalmedia publishes three premium periodicals: Himal Khabarpatrika, a Nepali-language fortnightly newsmagazine, Nepali Times, an English-language weekly newspaper, and Wave, also an English-language magazine aimed at teenagers.
With a view to providing Nepalese children with a good education in the English Medium in Nepal itself rather than sending them to Schools in the hill stations of India, Little Flowers' English School was established in Jhapa by Mr. Rajesh Khadka in 1981 A.D. Inspired by its success, GEMS was established by Mr. Khadka in 1984 A.D. in a rented house in Sanepa Height, Lalitpur with 78 students ...
Formal higher learning in Nepal began with the establishment of Tri-Chandra College in 1918(1975 BS), the first college in the country. Until 1985, Tribhuvan University was the only university in the country.
After it was presented to the chamber in 1929, it sank, virtually traceless — too big, maybe, too expensive, too ambitious, too contrarian to the plans of real estate salesmen.
Nepal was a late entrant into the modern world of science and technology. Nepal’s first institution of higher education, Tri-Chandra College, was established by Chandra Shumsher in 1918. The college introduced science at the intermediate level a year later, marking the genesis of formal science education in the country. [4]
Nepali Times (stylized as NEPALI Times) is an English weekly newspaper that provides reporting and commentary on Nepali politics, business, culture, travel and society in 16 pages. The weekly is aimed at the expatriate, diplomatic and business communities in Kathmandu , and through the internet for the Nepali diaspora .
The Annapurna Express is an English-language broadsheet newspaper, previously published and distributed weekly but published daily from 15 December 2022, in Nepal. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was started in 2017 by Annapurna Media Network, which also owns Annapurna Post , AP1 TV and Radio Annapurna Nepal.