These moves indicate the state is attempting to distance itself from the College Board, which administers AP courses and the SAT, at the behest of Republican leaders and Gov. Ron DeSantis, who pushed for the changes after slamming the nonprofit for including courses on queer theory and intersectionality in an emerging course surrounding Black history.
“This College Board, like, nobody elected them to anything,” DeSantis said in February. “They’re just kind of there.”
“They’re providing service — and you can either utilize those services or not.”
Over the last few years, DeSantis, who is expected to launch a 2024 presidential bid soon, has pushed a slate of policies and bills through the GOP legislature that take aim at how children are taught in Florida. Many of those policies, including laws restricting how educators teach gender identity and sexual orientation as well as race, have faced a severe backlash from Democrats and LGBTQ advocates across the country.
The governor’s objections to the College Board’s African American AP studies course angered many Black leaders across the country, with some accusing DeSantis of stoking a cultural fight to boost his presidential aspirations. Hundreds of people, including Black lawmakers and clergy, demonstrated against the DeSantis administration last February and civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump threatened a lawsuit over the governor’s rejection of the course.
In wide-ranging education packages, lawmakers are now calling on the Florida Department of Education to develop new courses and exams alongside state colleges and universities that can gauge student learning in the same vein as the College Board’s Advanced Placement program. AP includes more than 38 high school courses and nationally standardized examinations in several subjects from art to statistics, according to an analysis of the legislation.
The proposal is meant to “create more opportunities for high school students to earn postsecondary credit and reduce time to a degree,” the analysis says.
Lawmakers on Tuesday agreed to give the Department of Education $1.8 million to cultivate the coursework attached to this idea. Then, there is an additional $1 million for the agency to find an “independent third-party testing or assessment organization” to craft assessments for those courses.
The plan is to have this new testing system up and running sometime in next school year, state Sen. Keith Perry (R-Gainesville), the Senate’s education budget chief, told reporters Tuesday.
“There are a lot of kids who are home schooled, there’s a lot of other kids in the state that their education is different than the regular public school education,” Perry said. “We want to make sure there’s a broad capacity for them to be tested, and for that to recognized by the universities.”
In another change that could affect the College Board, the Legislature is considering the Classic Learning Test, or CLT, as an alternative to the SAT and ACT on multiple fronts.
The CLT is a college entrance exam offering tests in English, grammar, and mathematical skills, emphasizing foundational critical thinking skills, according to the bill analysis, which notes that “classic” is a reference to the classic literature and historical texts for the reading selections on the exams.
This fits in with the ideas advocated for by Republican policymakers and DeSantis, who endorsed “classical” education at many turns, including the overhaul being carried out at New College of Florida. As another connection, CLT in April added to its board of academic advisors Christopher Rufo, a conservative activist who DeSantis appointed as a New College trustee.
More than 200 schools accept CLT scores, according to the organization. That includes several colleges in Florida such as Reformation Bible college, Pensacola Christian college, Trinity Baptist College, Stetson University, Saint Leo University and Trinity College of Florida.
The proposed legislation would allow students to take the CLT to qualify for the state’s widely popular Bright Futures Scholarship, which is funded primarily through lottery dollars. As such, Florida’s education department would be tasked with developing a way to measure the CLT test scores against concordant SAT and ACT grades.
It also allows school districts to offer the CLT for free to grade 11 students, just like the SAT or ACT is currently.
The education package containing these changes is slated to pass the House on Wednesday. A similar Senate bill advanced in its last committee hearing Tuesday and is now eligible to be considered by the full chamber.
“We want to have multiple options for students,” House Speaker Paul Renner (R-Palm Coast) told reporters last week.
“This is a way for us to really closely align what we do so that high school students graduating can get immediate credit by our state universities,” Renner added.
[ad_2]
#DeSantis #beef #College #Board #Florida #tests
( With inputs from : www.politico.com )
Price: [price_with_discount] (as of [price_update_date] – Details)
[ad_1] Syutm Unisex Bell Classic Mini Backpack Trending for College Office Travel Purse Travel Bag Product Dimensions : 50 x 39 x 13 cm; 250 Grams Date First Available : 7 July 2022 Manufacturer : Syutm ASIN : B0B5ZP8QKF Item model number : SY22-1MB-C Country of Origin : India Department : Unisex-adult Manufacturer : Syutm, Syutm Packer : Syutm Item Weight : 250 g Item Dimensions LxWxH : 50 x 39 x 13 Centimeters Net Quantity : 1 Count Generic Name : Backpack
Lining Description: Polyester; Material Type: Polyester; Warranty Description: No Warranty; Age Range Description: Adult; Pattern Name: Solid
Gandhi Memorial College Kashmir Notification Regarding External Examination
Conduct of Skill Courses ( External Examination ) B.A/ B.SC/ B.Com/BBA 3rd Semester ( Backlog 2016-2021) as per the following schedule :
JKSSB Fresh Recruitment 2023 for 128 Posts
JKAS Fresh Recruitment 2023
Jammu Srinagar Daily Highway Traffic updates
Join Telegram | Install App for Iphone and Android
Install “Sarkari Naukri, Pvt Jobs, Trusted & Breaking News App” Highest Installs in J&K – Click me to Install
Install The News Caravan App for Android and Iphone
JKSSB Govt Jobs – Check Updates Bank Jobs, IBPS, All Banks Updates Jammu & Kashmir News Check All Latest News from J&K Government Jobs, Private Jobs – Check All Jobs Updates
[ad_2]
#Gandhi #Memorial #college #Kashmir #Notification #External #Examination( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )
Kohima: Nagaland has got the approval to set up its first medical college since it got statehood in 1963, Health and Family Welfare Minister P Paiwang Konyak said on Wednesday.
The medical college will begin its journey with 100 MBBS students from the academic session 2023-24.
“We received the approval for a 100 MBBS seat medical college from the National Medical Commission, Medical Assessment & Rating Board (NMC, MARB) on Tuesday,” Konyak told a press conference here.
The state government will send the acceptance letter within a week to enable the MARB to issue the Letter of Permission for the academic year 2023-24, he said.
It is “a great and historic day” for the people of the northeastern state, the minister said.
Health and Family Welfare Commissioner and Secretary Y Kikheto Sema told the press conference that the session will start by June-July this year.
Of the 100 seats, 85 would be for students of Nagaland while the remaining 15 will be reserved for aspirants from other states.
With a huge network of colleges and a lot of enrolment, the students are dissatisfied with the pace and process of the education they get, reports Babra Wani
Girl students of a college in Srinagar enjoying the sunshine on the premises of the college. KL Image: Bilal Bahadur
With her eyes glued to her mobile, Saima (name changed) is watching a lecture on Scaler and Vector quantities. With the uncertainty of the presence of teachers in her school looming large, she has been preparing for her upcoming examination virtually.
A student of Government Degree College, Kangan, Saima prefers not to attend the college where she is enrolled for BSc. She stopped going to her college because of the “lack of permanent staff for her subjects.” The deficit was managed by contractual lecturers, who leave the college when their contracts expire. “I mean if we talk about the present, we have no teachers there and our exams are about to begin in a month,” she said.
The lack of permanent teachers and staff is not a one-college problem but a pan-higher education issue in Kashmir. It literally triggered a sort of a “scandal” when a college principal formally ordered teachers from unrelated subjects to “engage” students in absence of the relevant faculty.
Karnah Story
Just like Saima, Zahra (name changed) is concerned and worried about the lack of teachers. A fifth-semester BA student at Government Degree College Tanghdar, Zahra recalls how she was a happy girl when she passed her higher secondary examinations just to get admission to the college. The excitement, however, soon went down as she realised the harsh realities.
“Living in a remote area was already challenging enough,” Zahra said. “We already knew that our college will not provide us with the facilities but we never knew that our issues will never be even heard.”
For her, the lack of permanent staff is her biggest concern. “Due to staff issues, we suffer from a lot of academic loss as we are not able to cover the whole syllabus and hence rely completely on self-study to prepare for examinations,” Zahra said. “Ours is a remote area so if we students face any problems here, they are rarely addressed.”
Located some 67 km north of Srinagar, beyond the Sadhna Pass, Tanghdar(Karnah) is located literally on the line of control (LOC). The area remains closed for most of the winter and there are cases when the authorities had to retain the dead in mortuaries till the road opened. The college, established in 2008 has more than 700 students on its rolls. This load is being managed by seven permanent teachers and three contractual teachers!
The Tulail Story
For 20 years old Adnan (name changed) walking for five kilometres to reach the college seems to be a daily routine. In 2019, when he and his friends heard about the establishment of a degree college, they were excited. They thought their hardships will now slow down. “We just have two permanent teachers here, one for history and one for English,” Adnan said.
For more than sixty students enrolled with Government Degree College Tulail, there are only six teachers, with two permanent and four contractual. Located at a distance of 200 km from Srinagar, Tulailis part of Gurez, the new destination for naya Kashmir tourism. The college was established in 2019.
Supposed to help residents not to migrate – as most of Gurez lives between Bandipore and Srinagar, the college could have hugely contributed. Students, however, insist this is not the case.
“We have a history teacher, right?,” one student pointed out. “History as a subject is not taught here. I mean we have other subjects here but not history so technically we have no teachers to study from.”
These teachers engage students in classes organised on a shift basis. Students insist they have bigger issues. “We do not even have our separate principal. The principal of our college watches over two different colleges (the other one is at Dawar), we neither have professors, principal nor facilities here,” Adnan who is currently studying in BA third semester said.
Due to the lack of facilities, mostly a shortage of teachers, students prefer to stay home. This, they do after paying fees and costs for the degrees. Days ahead of the examination, the colleges start assessing attendance and enforcing shortages on them. “Tell me how does it make sense that students travel long distances for hours together, jeopardising their health to study here but there are no teachers? Not even a single official has ever visited us, we have been left to the mercy of the Lord,” a visibly upset Adnan complained.
The lack of staff is not the only issue for the colleges in Gurez. “Last year, when we were writing our examinations, we knew we were appearing for three subjects,” Adnan said. “It was during the examinations that the college told us we have to appear in two more subjects – the subjects we never knew. We were desperate for what to write and a day before we had to write the examination, they sent the syllabus of that subject.”
Students arrive at a college after a gap of nearly one year, following Covid19 safety guidelines issued by the government, in Srinagar, Monday, February 15, 2021. All the educational institutes including schools, colleges and universities in Jammu and Kashmir, which were closed in March last year in wake of the COVID-19 outbreak. KL Image: Bilal Bahadur
The Kashmir Plains
The staff crisis is not a high-altitude issue. Even the colleges within and around Srinagar are suffering.
In Government Degree College, Sumbal, the students said the teachers for skill enhancement courses, which have been recently introduced, are not permanent. They are contractual and keep changing. “The continuous cycle of changing of these contractual teachers results in a month-long gap in the session,” one student said. “The month is wasted which is worrisome as it affects our studies.”
The Sumbal College was established in 2010 and has an enrolment of more than 2500 students. In the neighbouring degree college at Hajin, students are crying for a physical education teacher.
A Teacher Deficit
Subsequent governments in Jammu and Kashmir have gone into the creation of a huge network of colleges. Some villages that had put up huge struggles to get their middle schools upgraded into high schools are now addresses for the new colleges. There were around 161 colleges for general education with an overall enrolment of 151478 students manned by 5745 teachers by the end of 2020-21. With the onset of the National Education Policy (NEP-2020), the government made huge plans about improving higher education. It included making five autonomous degree-granting colleges into Multidisciplinary Education and Research Universities, a sort of deemed universities. In fact, the government said three are already operating as autonomous colleges. There was a focus on skill and innovation.
Under NEP-2020, 30 colleges have been identified for the start of research and designated as Hub colleges. These are supposed to provide basic facilities of infrastructure and logistics to the rest of the colleges in their catchment.
On the ground, however, nothing much is visible. “How can these colleges become research centres, when prestigious colleges like Amar Singh College are yet to grant the right to its first and second-semester students to get into the library,” one student, speaking anonymously asked. “Students have been desperately seeking library cards but we are told the access to the library is permitted to higher semester students.”
The NAAC accreditation is the new mad race within colleges in which the assessment is mostly based on the infrastructure and the results – nobody is seeing, if at all, the students are taught in classrooms. Officials said 55 colleges in Jammu and Kashmir are NAAC accredited 17 more will be added to the list by December 2023. By 2025, 70 old colleges will be NAAC accredited.
Right now, most colleges are battling the faculty issue. This triggered a controversy when the management of a state-run women’s college in Baramulla asked the faculty from unrelated subjects to engage “classes of the departments (currently) without staff”.Teachers from Education, Physical Education, and Sports were asked to engage in the classes of Political Science; Chemistry faculty was assigned Public Administration; Botany teachers were supposed to engage in Economics; the Zoology department was given Social Work and Mathematics was to manage the Philosophy students.
This was the outcome of the higher education department not filling the vacancies on a temporary basis by the middle of March, almost a month after the colleges opened after the winter break. It created a sort of scandal and the college principal was asked to amend or withdraw the order. As it did not happen, the authorities issued a show cause notice. Insiders said the college asserted that the faults are at the policymaking level and not the college level.
A Generation Lost
For the last nearly two decades, the higher education department has been hiring teachers on an academic arrangement basis against a consolidated sum. They are disengaged every season. They lack any rights to leave, provident fund and other facilities that permanent faculty enjoy. Over the years they have been the main players in the higher education department.
“Every year, the government used to hire 800 to 1000 teachers on an academic arrangement basis,” Dr M Yousuf, one of the contractual lecturers said. “With the NEP, the requirement might have gone slightly up, maybe up to 1200.”
For a very long time, there was a rule in Jammu and Kashmir government that if somebody worked for the government for seven years, he or she has a right to be permanently hired. They had gone to court with the plea and secured an order directing authorities to ensure the people are not disturbed. So, every year, the government would hire them on priority. Post-2019, the government stopped extending this courtesy to them and instead started hiring new faces. Some of the contractual impacts by this decision in Jammu went to the supreme court and secured an order. Yousuf said while the order was implemented in Jammu, it was breached in Kashmir. Now, they have gone to CAT and are expecting a positive decision.
“This crisis ended up almost destroying their career of nearly 500 contractual teachers –mostly PhDs’, who served the department for 15 t 20 years and then the government stopped hiring them and they crossed the age bar,” Yousuf, one of these candidates, said. “Now we are no-bodies, we gave our entire life to these institutions and now we have nothing to do.”
Yousuf said the delay in hiring teachers on an academic arrangement basis is the main issue that is hitting the colleges right now. “There is a set norm for how many students a teacher must have but I know cases, where one teacher is assigned 600 students.”
Transportation Facilities
Teaching is just one part of the crisis. Students allege, there are other issues as well. Transportation is a key factor. Though almost every college has a transport facility, quite a few busses move out of the college.
“Some students in my college walk a distance of around 26 km to reach the college,” Adnan said. “Why we do not have the transport facility as other colleges have.”
In Government Degree College Kangan, the students have a similar complaint. “We have no transportation facility here, I mean that is basic,” one student said.
Various colleges have buses but lack the funds to hire a driver. In certain cases, they have drivers but not enough money to fuel the bus.
In the newly established Government Degree College Hajin, students allege the ground is in puddles, “Whenever it rains, the ground accumulates water and it becomes difficult to even walk through it let alone be any other thing,” Ahmad (name changed) who is currently enrolled in arts stream in the college said, “We don’t even have proper classrooms. In the main building only a few classes are taught, the rest of the classes are conducted in a hut which has a couple of rooms.” Besides, he said there is still an old building, which used to be a middle school in the past, on the ground there.
“Even if available, the washrooms are not located in proper settings,” he said.
Government Degree College Hajin is one of the 52 new colleges which were established in the year 2019.
City Colleges
Zubair (name changed) and his friends made a decision to get admitted to Amar Singh College, a prominent city college. As soon as he joined the first semester his perspective changed. A student in the second semester at present, Zubair had a list of issues to share, “You know there is no punctuality, I mean the classes are never conducted on time. The teachers are always late and never on time.”
Amar Singh College, Srinagar
The college, Zubair added, lacks hygiene, has dirty desks in classrooms, unclean washrooms and abundant stray dogs. This is in addition to the staff shortage. “We have been waiting since March for the teacher, as the contract of our previous teacher expired,” he said. The lack of mics in the classrooms is yet another concern for the students. “The classrooms are huge and the teachers are not audible to everybody in the class.”
The students said they have no access t the library. It has been done so easily. The college has not issued identity cards which are basic to entry into the library.
“This college has no proper gatekeeping and outsiders who are not even enrolled in our college get in and fight with the students of our college,” one female student said. “There is nobody who can check the people getting in.” Students confirmed the drug-peddling boys moving around.
Students of Women’s’ College Nawa Kadal alleged that the government is frequently shifting their principals. This, they said, is impacted the college.
In Women’s College MA Road, the students complained how the focus has been more on extra-curricular activities and not on education, “The classwork always suffers the most.”
Officials Admit
College managers and insiders admitted to the lot of issues they are facing. However, they insist they are not supposed to talk the way they used to talk earlier. Some of them agreed to talk in utmost anonymity.
“Yes, there is no college bus for students and the majority of the faculty positions are vacant except English and History,” echoing the thoughts of the students an official posted in Government Degree College, Tulail said. The official added that they have tried bringing it to the notice of authorities from time to time, “We had taken up the matter with our ex-principal secretary and he told that they were ready to sanction the college bus but it was not possible to engage any driver as there is a blanket ban on contractual or local fund recruitment.” He also lamented over the trend of teachers from Gurez and Tulail ensuring they are transferred to other places outside Gurez. “What can we expect from the teachers who are hired on a contractual basis.”
Most of the college managers approached to offer their side of the story but refused to talk. “Maybe next time,” one college principal said.
Hyderabad: In order to strengthen the agricultural sector in Telangana, the second-largest agricultural college in the state affiliated with Professor Jayashankar Agricultural University was inaugurated in the Rajanna-Sirisilla district on Wednesday.
Spread over an area of 35 acres, the college building bears separate hostels for male and female students, agricultural research field, computer labs, a laboratory, seminar rooms and a modern library that has been set up on 16 acres in G Plus 2 style.
35 ఎకరాల విస్తీర్ణంలో తెలంగాణ ప్రభుత్వం ఈ కళాశాలను నిర్మించింది. 16 ఎకరాల్లో జీ ప్లస్ 2 పద్ధతిలో కళాశాల భవనం, విద్యార్థిని, విద్యార్థులకు వేర్వేరు హాస్టళ్లు, 19 ఎకరాల్లో వ్యవసాయ పరిశోధనా క్షేత్రం, కంప్యూటర్ ల్యాబ్లు, ప్రయోగశాల, సెమినార్ రూములు, ఆధునిక లైబ్రరీ ఏర్పాటుచేశారు. pic.twitter.com/QknHR2wL5I
— Minister for IT, Industries, MA & UD, Telangana (@MinisterKTR) April 12, 2023
Telangana urban development minister KT Rama Rao who inaugurated the vast campus said, “There was a possibility for students to become the top agronomists in the country if facilities provided in the college were utilized properly. Students should reach a position to create jobs by emerging as entrepreneurs and industrialists.”
దేశంలో ఎక్కడా లేనివిధంగా, అన్నం పెట్టే రైతుల సంక్షేమానికి అధిక ప్రాధాన్యతనిస్తూ వ్యవసాయ రంగంలో విప్లవాత్మకమైన మార్పులకు శ్రీకారం చుట్టి దేశానికే ఆదర్శంగా నిలుస్తున్నది ముఖ్యమంత్రి కేసీఆర్ గారి పాలన. pic.twitter.com/CzdM2be4YS
— Minister for IT, Industries, MA & UD, Telangana (@MinisterKTR) April 12, 2023
While flying to Sircilla in a helicopter, KTR along with assembly speaker Pocharam Srinivas Reddy and agriculture minister S Niranjan Reddy, had an aerial view of the Konda Pochamma Sagar, Mallana Sagar, Ranganayaka Sagar, Annapurna Reservoir and the Mid Manair Reservoir and said, “None of these reservoirs existed in the erstwhile Andhra Pradesh, but now they have been developed as they played a crucial role in the expansion of cultivation area in the district.”
Srinivas Reddy praised the developmental activities uptaken by the minister and said KTR had ensured the development of the district.
“Rajanna-Sircilla district stood in first place in Telangana with a major improvement in the groundwater table while the cultivation area in the state has increased by 2.30 lakh acres from 1.80 lakh acres with the construction of irrigation projects,” said Srinivas.
Niranjan Reddy said there was a shortage of agriculture colleges in the country. Out of 700 agricultural colleges across the country, only 73 were in the government sector.
In another development, a primary processing centre, built under the auspices of the Telangana State Industrial Infrastructure Corporation in the district of Rajanna Sircilla was inaugurated by KTR.
రాజన్న సిరిసిల్ల జిల్లా జిల్లెల్లలో తెలంగాణ రాష్ట్ర పారిశ్రామిక మౌలిక సదుపాయాల సంస్థ ఆధ్వర్యంలో నిర్మించిన ప్రైమరీ ప్రాసెసింగ్ సెంటర్ను స్పీకర్ @PSRTRS, మంత్రులు @SingireddyBRS, @KTRBRS ప్రారంభించారు pic.twitter.com/iLuefBHSkV
— Minister for IT, Industries, MA & UD, Telangana (@MinisterKTR) April 12, 2023
Later in the day, another statue of Dr BR Ambedkar was unveiled by KTR in the district.
రాజన్న సిరిసిల్ల జిల్లా, తంగళ్లపల్లి మండలం, జిల్లెల్లలో ఏర్పాటు చేసిన డాక్టర్ బి.ఆర్. అంబేద్కర్ విగ్రహాన్ని మంత్రి @KTRBRS ఆవిష్కరించారు. pic.twitter.com/ZvXZcb9V12
— Minister for IT, Industries, MA & UD, Telangana (@MinisterKTR) April 12, 2023
Hyderabad: Renowned surgeon Dr P. Raghu Ram has been appointed as an international advisor to the Royal College of Physicians & Surgeons of Glasgow (RCPSG), which is one of the oldest Royal Colleges in the world.
Raghu Ram, currently director of KIMS-Ushalakshmi Centre for Breast Diseases in Hyderabad, is the first doctor from Telangana and Andhra Pradesh to achieve the distinction.
Raghu Ram, who is also a Padma Shri awardee, would be providing strategic advice to RCPSG.
He is one of the few in the world to have obtained Fellowship from all the four Surgical Royal Colleges in the British Isles (FRCS – London, Edinburgh, Glasgow & Ireland) at a very young age.
It is in recognition of his established academic track record and outstanding contribution to help budding surgeons from the Indian subcontinent over the past two decades that he has been given this new onerous responsibility by RCPSG, said a statement.
Confirming the appointment from 203 -2026, with an option to extend for another three years, Professor Hany Eteiba, International Director for the RCPSG in a letter addressed to Raghu Ram stated: “I wish to extend my sincerest thanks for your willingness and commitment to the College’s goal of developing this important international network.
“It was great to meet with you virtually last weekAto gain insight into your ideas about how the College can engage with existing and prospectiveAmembers in India. I extend a warm welcome to you as our new International Advisor.”
Founded in 1599, RCPSG is the only multidisciplinary Royal College in the British Isles that represents a diverse community of over 15,000 surgeons, dentists and professionals working in podiatry and travel medicine from across 97 countries around the world.
The Royal College empowers its members to provide the highest standards of care to their patients through education, training and assessment.
Raghu Ram has also served as international surgical advisor for The Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh for 10 years from 2010-2020 and that makes him the only surgeon from South Asia to have been associated with two of the oldest Royal Colleges in the world as international advisor.
Srinagar, Apr 03: The Higher Education Department on Monday ordered transfers and postings of 4 principals of Government Degree Colleges besides placing additional charge of Nodal Principal Kashmir.
As per the order by Commissioner Secretary Higher education J-K, a copy of which lies with news agency Kashmir Dot Com, Khurshid Ahmad Khan, principal, Sri Pratap Singh College has been transferred and posted as Principal, Islamia College of Science and Commerce.
Sheikh Aijaz Bashir, Principal, Islamia College of Science and Commerce has been posted as Principal Amar Singh College Srinagar.
Ghulam Jeelani Qureshi, Principal, GDC Hyderpora has been posted as principal, Sri Pratap Singh College.
Manzoor Ahmad Lone, Principal, GDC Kulgam has been posted as principal of GDC Hyderpora Srinagar.
In a separate order, the higher education department has given additional charge of Nodal Principal Kashmir to Principal, Amar Singh College Srinagar, till further orders. (KDC)
Telangana Admission and Fee Regulatory Committee (TAFRC)
Hyderabad: Telangana Admission and Fee Regulatory Committee (TAFRC) is set to review the medical course fee structures of private unaided professional institutions in the state for the upcoming academic years.
The college management is required to submit data for the last financial year and the audited statements for 2021 to 2022 and 2022 to 2023 on the committee’s website before April 30.
Institutions failing to submit the statements of income and expenditure, audited balance sheets, and requirements for developmental needs for the immediately preceding year, as well as particulars of expenditure incurred on salaries and infrastructure and other specified particulars, will not be eligible to collect fee, said a press release.
The fee structure will be reviewed and determined for the undergraduate, postgraduate, and super-specialty medical and dental courses, as well as the allied courses.
College professor booked in Chennai after ex-student files sexual harassment complaint
Chennai: Chennai police have registered an FIR against an assistant professor of an arts college belonging to the Kalakshetra Foundation, after a former girl student filed a sexual harassment complaint.
The assistant professor, Hari Padman, was booked under the Tamil Nadu Prohibition of Woman Act.
The Adayar All women police registered the FIR against Hari Padman after the girl student met the Chennai city police commissioner Shankar Jiswal who promptly forwarded the complaint to the Adayar Women Police station.
Hundreds of girls from the Kalakshetra Foundation conducted a sit-in dharna on Friday complaining of sexual harassment and sending obscene messages against four male faculty members.
Addressing reporters here, the Tamil Nadu Women’s Commission chairperson A.S. Kumari said that several complaints were received from girl students against teachers on sexual harassment.
The chairperson also met several students and teachers as well as the director of the Kalakshetra foundation, Revathi Ramachandran.
It is to be noted that several girl students have in private said that they were not able to go to the institution for fear of being sexually harassed.
The girl students have also complained to the Union Ministry of Culture about the harassment meted out to them and requested for stern action against those responsible.