Tue, 21-Oct-2025

KP announces summer vacations for schools

KP

PESHAWAR: The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Education Department has announced summer vacations for both public and private educational institutions across the province. According to the notification, in hot regions: primary schools will remain closed from June 1 to August 31 while high and higher secondary schools will observe holidays from June 15 to August 31. Similarly, in … Read more

All educational institutions to remain closed due to war situation

All educational institutions to remain closed due to war situation

The Punjab School Education Department has announced a two-day closure for all public and private educational institutions across the province. According to the notification, schools will remain closed on Friday and Saturday. The teaching process will resume from Monday, confirmed the Secretary of Education. The decision applies to both government and private schools and is … Read more

LHC orders to formulate work-from-home policy for schools, offices

LHC

LAHORE: The Lahore High Court (LHC) on Friday directed the administration to formulate a work-from-home policy for schools and offices. Justice Shahid Karim of Lahore High Court heard the petitions against not taking effective measures to remedy the smog. During the hearing, the members of the commission said that trees were cut to build a … Read more

Schools in Multan and Lahore divisions reopened

School timings announced for Ramazan in Sindh

LAHORE: Punjab government has reopened educational institutes in Lahore and Multan divisions after reduction in smog in different cities of province.

According to the Punjab Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), with the change in the direction of the eastern winds, there was a reduction in smog in different cities of Punjab.

Multan is the most polluted city in the country with an air quality index of 329, followed by Lahore with an air quality index of 291.

Schools in Lahore and Multan divisions will open from today after reduction in smog, while teaching activities have been resumed in other districts as well.

On the other hand, anti-smog grand operation is going on in Punjab and according to provincial minister Maryam Aurangzeb, dozens of kilns, industrial units were demolished, dozens of factories and factories were sealed in 4 days.

Lahore’s well-known super store has been sealed for not implementing preventive measures for smog and a case has also been registered against the store management.

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Punjab to open schools in Rawalpindi Division from tomorrow

Punjab

LAHORE: Punjab government has decided to open educational institutions in Rawalpindi division from tomorrow.

According to the media reports, it has been decided to open educational institutions in Rawalpindi Division and other districts from yesterday and the administration has issued a notification to open educational institutions.

Due to reduction in smog and improvement in weather, notification has been issued to open schools in Rawalpindi, Jhelum, Attock, Chakwal from tomorrow.

It should be noted that earlier the Punjab government had issued a notification to close educational institutions from November 17 to November 24.

On the other hand, smog situation in Punjab started to improve.

Rahim Yar Khan has been declared as the most polluted city of Punjab with 669 air particulate meters while  Bahawalpur is second with 443 air index and Lahore is third with 402.

Motorway M4 from Abdul Hakeem to Multan, M5 from Multan to Sukkur has been closed due to smog, while Lahore-Sialkot Motorway M11 has been completely closed.

Among the most polluted cities in the world, the Indian capital New Delhi ranks first, with an air index of 1003.

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Schools in Punjab closed till Nov 17 due to smog

Smog conditions ease in Punjab, Lahore drops from most polluted ranking

RAWALPINDI:  The Punjab government has issued orders to close private and public schools in all districts of the province due to increasing smog and air pollution.

Due to increasing smog and air pollution in Punjab, it has been decided to keep all schools completely closed till November 17.

Earlier, it was decided to keep educational institutions closed in 8 districts of Punjab including Lahore, Faisalabad, Gujranwala, Multan, Rawalpindi, Dera Ghazi Khan, Sargodha and Sahiwal among other districts. Orders have been issued to close the school, the notification of which has also been issued.

According to the notification, all government and private schools in the province will remain closed till November 17, while the notification has directed that the government-run educational institutions, tuition centers be shifted to online session.

According to the authorities, the decision to keep the educational institutions closed has been taken due to the increase in air quality index and increase in respiratory, eye and throat diseases due to air pollution.

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 Schools to remain closed on August 26 in Sindh

 Schools

KARACHI: The Sindh Education Department has announced that all public and private schools across the province will remain close on August 26 on connection of Chehlum of Hazrat Imam Hussain(RA).

The vacation in schools has been taken in the light of the decision of the steering committee of the provincial education department.

The Provincial Education Department has declared a holiday in all government and private schools of the province on Monday, August 26, on the occasion of  Chehlum of Hazrat Imam Hussain.

The Chehlum of Hazrat Imam Hussain (RA) will be observed on Monday across the province with religious zeal and reverence amid high security.

The event marks the culmination of a 40-day mourning period after the martyrdom date of Hazrat Imam Hussain (RA) and his 72 companions in the Battle of Karbala on the 10th of Muharram in 680AD.

The processions with Alam, Tazia, and Zuljinah would be taken out in different cities across the province.

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Punjab to provide glasses, hearing aids to 700,0000 students

Punjab

LAHORE: Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif accorded an approval to the project for providing glasses and hearing aids to 700,000 students.

Students in schools across Punjab will be subjected to medical check up of their eyesight and hearing abilities. Students having weak eyesight and weak hearing abilities will be provided with spectacles and hearing aids.

The screening process in the government and private schools across Punjab will be launched soon.

A famous institution, ATscale, will provide Rs. 500 million financial assistance in this regard.

Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif on Saturday met an ATscale delegation in which matters pertaining to Internet services in schools and other affairs were discussed.

Matters relating to steps being undertaken to meet nutritional needs among school children also came under review. Health nutrition and other matters were reviewed and the need for making collaboration with the department concerned was emphasized.

It was agreed to undertake steps for the enhancement of school teachers capacity building.

The Chief Minister said a first government school for children suffering from autism in Punjab will be established in Lahore.

“I want to serve the people of Punjab in a true spirit instead of adopting the traditional manner. A positive change is only possible by invoking a new thinking in a modern era. It is the right of every child to attain education according to international standards.

A ‘Packet Milk Project’ is being launched in collaboration with a private sector to meet nutritional deficiencies of the students. We have resumed a free emergency Wi-Fi facility in Lahore,” she added.

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Schools Closure Notified Due to Balochistan Assembly Session

School Closure in Sindh as Heavy Rainfall Predicted on Friday

The district administration in Quetta has announced the closure of schools for Wednesday, citing the session of the Balochistan Assembly. A notification from the Deputy Commissioner’s office has been issued regarding this decision. The Balochistan Assembly is scheduled to convene on Wednesday, February 28, for the swearing-in of newly elected MPAs. Governor Balochistan Abdul Wali … Read more

KP Govt imposes ban on use of mobile phones in schools

KP Govt

PESHAWAR: A ban was imposed on the use of mobile phones in schools in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

The Directorate of Education Department has sent a letter to the education officers of all districts in which it has been asked to ban the use of mobile phones during school hours.

According to the Department of Education, the use of mobile phones during school hours hurts the student’s studies, so the use of mobile phones should be banned in the classroom.

The letter further said that the heads of the institution will receive mobile phones from all the staff in the morning.

In the post, it is directed that in case of emergency, the staff should contact the landline or mobile phone of the school head, the staff can use their mobile phone only during free time.

According to the letter, it is necessary to take permission from the heads of the institution to take pictures or videos.

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IG Sindh orders surveillance over supply of drugs to schools, cafes in Karachi

drugs in schools

KARACHI: A report has revealed the widespread supply of drugs in schools and restaurants across Karachi, prompting police to increase surveillance, BOL News reported. Sindh Inspector-General of Police, Ghulam Nabi Memon, received the confidential report regarding the supply of drug to young children in schools and cafes in the city. The police chief took notice … Read more

PM Shehbaz launches ‘School on wheels’ to promote child literacy

PM School on wheels

PM Shehbaz Sharif launched ‘School on wheels’ today The mobile schools consisting of eight buses The buses have been equipped with all equipment ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister (PM) Shehbaz Sharif on Tuesday terming children the ‘future builders of the nation’ launched ‘School on wheels’ for them saying the government would provide maximum educational facilities to them. … Read more

No extension in winter vacations in Punjab

Punjab winter vacations

Punjab decided against extending winter vacations Schools and colleges will reopen on Jan 9 SED had announced two week-long long winter holidays LAHORE: Punjab authorities have decided against extending winter vacations in schools and colleges due to the extreme cold weather. It was earlier reported that winter vacations in public and private educational institutes were … Read more

Smog: LHC directs to extend holidays for educational institutes

LHC holidays

LHC ordered extension of holidays in schools Smog condition in Punjab has been intensifying Notification was also issued regarding closure of markets LAHORE: The Lahore High Court (LHC) has extended the holidays in schools and colleges of the province for another week owing to the soaring smog situation. The court has ordered the submission of … Read more

India: Supreme court judges conflict on wearing hijab in schools

India Supreme court

Due to conflicting opinions from two judges. India’s Supreme Court has been unable to rule on whether Muslim students may wear the hijab in classrooms and colleges Due to conflicting opinions from two judges, India’s Supreme Court has been unable to rule on whether Muslim students may wear the hijab in classrooms and colleges. One … Read more

Google’s Tech Valley to upgrade schools in Karachi

Dengue
  • An MoU has been signed between the Sindh government and Tech Valley Pakistan.
  • Tech Valley will be in charge of integrating Google’s digital learning platforms in schools.
  • The MoU will digitize Karachi’s school education ecosystem and improve students’ engagement in learning.

A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to digitize schools in Karachi has been signed between the Sindh government and Tech Valley Pakistan, a Google for Education country partner.

The Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) was signed on Thursday by Ghulam Akbar Laghari, Secretary of Sindh Education and Literacy Department (SELD), and Umar Farooq, CEO of Tech Valley.

In order to transform students’ learning experiences, Tech Valley will be in charge of integrating Google’s digital learning platforms in schools.

Google Classroom is one of the systems that enable professors to post reading materials, assignments, and quizzes as well as interact with students in real-time.

Additionally, Tech Valley will train thousands of students and teachers from all over Sindh in various Computer Science (CS) courses.

The Google CS First and Be Internet Awesome initiatives will initially train 250 students and 100 teachers from five schools.

In his remarks, Secretary SELD praised Tech Valley and Google for taking the initiative to transform Sindh’s school system and urged other firms to pursue similar partnerships.

According to CEO Tech Valley, the MoU will digitize Karachi’s school education ecosystem and improve students’ engagement in learning.

 

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Warnings of heavy rainfall: public, private schools will remain closed across Sindh today 

Schools

Sindh Education Minister Sardar Ali Shah has announced that all government and private schools across Sindh will remain closed on Thursday (today) amid warnings of heavy rainfall. The minister late Wednesday evening said that Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah had instructed the department to announce a holiday for schools. Earlier, several private educational institutions had … Read more

All private schools to remain closed tomorrow due to heavy rainfall 

All private schools to remain closed tomorrow due to heavy rainfall 

All Private Schools Management Association has announced that educational institutions will be closed on August 18 due to heavy rains in other districts of Sindh, including Karachi.

Until now, two major private school associations in Sindh has announced plans to keep the schools closed. The decision to close schools has not yet been taken at the official level.

According to the Private Schools Association, the decision to keep the schools closed is due to safety measures.

Due to the recent rains in Karachi, the Board of Higher Secondary Education Karachi has put off the annual intermediate exams.

Postponed Arts Papers for Regular, Arts Private, and Special Candidates, as well as Science Group Practical Examinations.

All postponed papers will now be held on Thursday, August 25 at the same examination centers at the pre-given schedule and time.

The colleges have been instructed to reschedule the practical exams. The papers which have been postponed include

Arts Regular and Private Urdu Advanced Paper II, Special candidates must take English (Optional) Paper II, Mathematics Paper II, and Computer Science Paper.

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San Diego schools try untested radical agenda to push for mediocrity

  • The San Diego Unified schools are experiencing a problem of mediocrity that is purposefully created. The same flawed mentality driving senior leaders is the cause of the urge to eliminate honours courses.
  • If nothing is done about it, it will turn out badly if nothing’s done at all. The political elite in San Diego don’t appear to be aware that they live in a society that values discrimination, individualism, and failure.
  • They would be wise to warmly welcome someone who genuinely supports academic brilliance instead of cruelly subjecting kids to social experimentation.

San Diego Unified schools are facing a crisis of intentionally designed mediocrity.

The desire to slash honors courses and upend traditional grading stems from the same bad philosophy animating its top leaders.

Their vision is captured by Marcia Gentry, director of the Gifted Education Resource Institute at Purdue, who claims that a test is “not really a raw ability test. Otherwise it would yield equal numbers among all groups of people.” In this line of thinking tests are clearly racist because as of today there are outcome disparities associated with race.

In a recent article in the San Diego Union Tribune, Richard Barrera, trustee on the San Diego Unified School District argued that determining a student’s intelligence via a test is “silly.” The paper paraphrased, saying he described the tests as “outdated and rooted in racism.”

Barrera makes the argument that personal recommendations from parents and teachers are a better metric to judge a student’s educational capabilities than actual tests. Barrera is moving the district toward eliminating advanced honors courses, and toward a pass-fail based grading system, where nobody is allowed to fail, because nobody is allowed to excel.

This will prove disastrous if left unchecked. The argument that academic testing was created to institute a racial hierarchy is a flat-out lie. It is a lazy solution that will take us down the dangerous path of leaving our students unprepared for the challenges of the real world.

Recently, Patrick Henry High parents were stunned to discover that some honors courses were no longer available to students. In the wake of public outcry this was amended and has since been seemingly resolved.

However, I’m of the strong opinion that district leaders are going to try this again and try it everywhere. I don’t believe they are sorry they did it. I believe they are sorry they got caught and didn’t properly brand the agenda.

To be sure, when these bad ideas resurface, they will be rebranded as “advanced courses for all,” but, in reality, they will be a one-size-fits-all intentionally designed mediocrity. Not everyone can take an advanced course, because students find themselves in different places, at different times. Unfortunately, these bankrupt course-ending ideas are often met with compassion, the essential fuel behind the equal outcome agenda, now branded as “equity.”

In truth, these arguments that play on compassion and caring are anything but. This vision is entirely forgetful of familial ties, and economic disparities, which are the two factors widely associated with educational outcomes.

Rather than looking to the family, they have set their eyes on the new radical chic, i.e. biological determinism based on race. This new form of discriminatory racism is now in vogue, and playing out at a school near you, to its detriment.

As parents pull their kids out in droves, by the tens of thousands in San Diego, away goes the needed funding that is based on average daily attendance. Almost everything is trending the wrong way in San Diego Unified, and that should be a cause for concern for all Americans. Mocking California’s failures from a distance is a self-defeating indulgence. There are real kids being left behind, and a once-great place that’s sliding into decline.

Someone must stop the bleeding driven by bad ideas. The next great scientist, architect, writer, or engineer cannot come out of San Diego if individual students are not allowed to pull themselves up as far as they can, regardless of their race.

San Diego’s leaders seem unaware that they operate in an echo chamber of discriminatory, anti-individualistic, anti-excellence thought. They would be well advised to welcome someone who truly stands for academic excellence, not radical social experimentation on children.

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DC schools’ COVID-19 vaccine mandate could hit Black students hardest

  • Students in Washington, D.C., will be required to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. Only 60 percent of Black students in the same age range have received the shot.
  • If the mandate is strictly enforced, it may put additional strain on minority communities. Students in Washington, D.C., will be required to get vaccinated against the coronavirus.
  • The mandate may force many students back into remote learning situations. New Orleans became one of the few large school districts to implement a policy similar to that of Washington’s in February.

Students over the age of 12 in Washington, D.C., will be required to receive the COVID-19 vaccine in order to attend school, a decision that may be especially difficult for the city’s Black students.

According to the Washington Post, “our goal is that no child misses a single day of school,” Asad Bandealy, the chief of the D.C. Department of Health’s Health Care Access Bureau, said of the mandate. “That means we need to get started right away.”

Approximately 85 percent of the student population in Washington, D.C. between the ages of 12 and 15 is currently immunised against COVID-19, but only 60 percent of Black students in the same age range have received the shot. If the vaccine mandate is strictly enforced, it may put additional strain on minority communities, which have already been disproportionately harmed by COVID-19 policies.

According to one Harvard University study, closed schools resulted in significant loss of achievement for students during the coronavirus pandemic, particularly among minority and low-income students.

“Students in high-poverty schools that were remote for most of 2020-21 lost about 0.45 standard deviations in math,” Thomas Kane, a professor of education at Harvard and one of the study’s authors, said of the study’s findings earlier this year in an interview with the Harvard Gazette.

Kane claimed that achievement gaps widened in districts that used remote learning for more than three weeks, claiming that in-person instruction was a “critical piece of our social infrastructure that we had taken for granted.”

However, the vaccine mandate, which is among the strictest in the country, may force many students in the nation’s capital back into remote learning situations.

Students in New York City are strongly encouraged but not required to get vaccinated unless they plan to participate in certain athletic programmes, whereas students in Los Angeles will not be required to get vaccinated after the Los Angeles Unified School District delayed a mandate that was supposed to go into effect for the upcoming school year.

In February, New Orleans became one of the few large school districts in the country to implement a policy similar to that of Washington, D.C., by adding the coronavirus vaccine to a list of required immunizations for students over the age of five.

The nation’s capital has one of the country’s most unique public school systems, governed by the 13-member D.C. Council rather than a school board. According to Anne Liu, an infectious-diseases doctor and clinical associate professor at Stanford University, officials hope that mandates like the one in D.C. will help raise vaccination rates among children.

“I believe it is to the benefit of the children, teachers, and staff in the schools, as well as the rest of the city,” Liu said, describing higher vaccination rates as a “positive thing to work toward.”

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Sri Lanka rushes to find fuel as shortages hit schools, workers

Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka’s power and energy minister announced on Tuesday that the duopoly governing imports will end . The minister, Kanchana Wijesekera, was leaving for Qatar when the cabinet made its decision. Sri Lankan Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksantha Wijesekera travelled to Qatar on Monday. In quest of energy deals to ease a chronic fuel shortage that … Read more

Students to get education about ‘Victims of Communism’ bill signed in Florida

Ron DeSantis

Students to get education about ‘Victims of Communism’ bill signed in Florida Conversations of orientation personality and sexual inclination are restricted in numerous Florida homerooms in light of lead representative Ron DeSantis’ “don’t say gay” regulation, close by much numerical reading material hindered for “precluded subjects”. Presently the Republican who has boisterously censured what he … Read more

Laos to vaccinate children aged 6-11 against COVID-19

laos

VIENTIANE – The Lao government will begin a nationwide rollout of COVID-19 vaccinations for children aged 6 to 11 in March in a bid to reopen schools safely, local media reported Wednesday. Local daily Vientiane Times quoted Deputy Manager of the National Immunization Program Chansai Pathammavong as saying that a total of 957,000 children in … Read more

Sindh health department decides to conduct Covid-19 tests at schools

KARACHI: The Sindh health department on Sunday decided to conduct coronavirus tests at schools across the province. A notification in this regard has been issued to all the district health officers, Bol news reported. As per details, 100 samples will be collected from schools in each district. Then the samples will be sent to Dow … Read more

Aussie researchers develop new copper surface to help combat antibiotic-resistant superbugs

Aussie researchers develop new copper surface to help combat antibiotic-resistant superbugs

SYDNEY, Dec. 13 (Xinhua) — Australian researchers developed a new copper surface that could kill bacteria more than 100 times faster and more effectively than standard copper, which is expected to help combat the growing threat of antibiotic-resistant superbugs. The finding, published in the Biomaterials on Monday, is the result of a collaborative research project … Read more

UN urges full reopening of South Asia schools amid learning loss

Schools

KATHMANDU: India and its neighbours should fully reopen schools to address the interrupted education of more than 400 million children whose classrooms were shut by the coronavirus pandemic, UNICEF said Thursday, with a top official warning the consequences could last decades. Schools in Bangladesh were closed for almost 18 months, one of the longest closures … Read more

Shortage of resources impacting local govt bodies performance, claims Ghani

KARACHI: Sindh Information Minister Saeed Ghani claimed on Thursday that local government bodies were unable to run dispensaries, hospitals and schools due to shortage of resources, and therefore, they wanted these institutions to be handed over to the Sindh government. Read more: PSP to challenge Sindh Local Bodies Act in SHC “Improvement in Abbasi Shaheed Hospital … Read more

Punjab govt makes recitation of Durood Sharif mandatory in schools

School

LAHORE: The Punjab government has made it mandatory to recite Durood Sharif during assembly hours in schools across the province. On the directives of the provincial Chief Minister Usman Buzdar, the Punjab chief secretary, on Tuesday, notified schools about the decision through a circular. Read more: PM launches Rehmatul-Lil Alameen scholarship program in Islamabad “During … Read more