Improving curriculum and formal teaching methods stressed
Islamabad There should be a process to improve curriculum and formal teaching methods as par international standards while with a more gender sensitive budget we may be able to address vast needs of the society, recommended by renowned scholars and educationists during a discussion forum hosted by Idara-e-Talem-o-Agahi here. The
By our correspondents
September 19, 2015
Islamabad
There should be a process to improve curriculum and formal teaching methods as par international standards while with a more gender sensitive budget we may be able to address vast needs of the society, recommended by renowned scholars and educationists during a discussion forum hosted by Idara-e-Talem-o-Agahi here.
The forum was conducted in connection with recently celebrated global literacy day by the collaboration of international organisation Oxfam GB. A large number of educationists, representatives of education related departments of every province including AJK, senior officials of development sector, teachers along with students and youth attended the event and shared their suggestions for the upcoming national education policy 2016 which is being finalised by federal government. While expressing their concerns over allocation of funds for education sector, experts demanded a fair transition of funds allocation along with strict regulations to stop embezzlements and corruption.
There should be a process to improve curriculum and formal teaching methods as par international standards while with a more gender sensitive budget we may be able to address vast needs of the society, recommended by renowned scholars and educationists during a discussion forum hosted by Idara-e-Talem-o-Agahi here.
The forum was conducted in connection with recently celebrated global literacy day by the collaboration of international organisation Oxfam GB. A large number of educationists, representatives of education related departments of every province including AJK, senior officials of development sector, teachers along with students and youth attended the event and shared their suggestions for the upcoming national education policy 2016 which is being finalised by federal government. While expressing their concerns over allocation of funds for education sector, experts demanded a fair transition of funds allocation along with strict regulations to stop embezzlements and corruption.
-
Polar Vortex ‘exceptional’ Disruption: Rare Shift Signals Extreme February Winter -
Which Countries Are Worst And Best In Public Sector AI Race? -
Matthew McConaughey Opens Up About His Painful Battle With THIS -
Emma Stone Reveals She Is ‘too Afraid’ Of Her ‘own Mental Health’ -
China Unveils ‘Star Wars’-like Missile Warship For Space Combat -
King Charles Facing Pressure Inside Palace Over 'Andrew Problem' -
Trump Refuses Apology For Video Depicting Obama As Apes Amid Growing Backlash -
Jesy Nelson Reflects On Leaving Girls' Band Little Mix -
World’s First Pokemon Theme Park Opens In Tokyo, Boosts Japan Tourism -
Waymo Trains Robotaxis In Virtual Cities Using DeepMind’s Genie 3 -
5 Simple Rules To Follow For Smooth, Healthy Hair -
$44 Billion Bitcoin Blunder: Bithumb Exchange Apologizes For Accidental Payout -
Katie Price Ends Public Feud With Ex Peter Andre After 16 Years -
Apple May Bring ChatGPT And Other AI Apps To CarPlay -
Meghan Markle, Prince Harry Likely To Attend Super Bowl Halftime Show 2026 -
AI Next Big Trial: Elon Musk Calls For ‘Galileo Test’ To Prove True Intelligence