Monthly Newsletter | July 2025 | Volume 71
July comes out as a turning point for school education in India, carried out with community-led efforts, policy shifts and bold reforms that assure longer impact. This July 2025, the spotlight glitters on grassroots development, regional parity, classroom innovation and language politics, all influencing the Indian learner’s future.
Chandigarh determines a national benchmark by leading the Performance Grading Index with a score of 703 out of 1000, cutting down the regional gap in education. Tumakuru in Karnataka becomes an example of infrastructural rejuvenation, reconstructing schools via MGNREGA, creating toilets, compound walls and playgrounds while promoting local employment.
A main linguistic policy setback speculates grassroots opposition, as the state rolls back the arguable third-language mandate, maintaining cultural priorities and student choice in Maharashtra. On the other hand, Delhi declares a progressive move, establishing English-medium sections in all government schools starting 2025–26, reacting to developing parental ambitions.
Uttar Pradesh introduces a travel allowance scheme to ensure access to secondary education in remote areas, as Kerala and others reconsider the classroom seating system to eliminate the frontbencher-backbencher divide. This month, the Indian education system has not just emerged; it has taken a positive leap toward innovation, inclusion and equity.
Chandigarh has acquired the top score in school education across India, gaining 703 by 1000 points. It is the only zone in the Prachesta 1 grade level 701 to 760, setting a crucial enhancement from...
Many government schools in the Tumakuru district are reborn through the MGNREGA (Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act) Scheme. Tumakuru has spent Rs 122 Cr in one year (2024-25) t...
Academics in Pune welcomed Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis’s Sunday evening announcement to scrap the two government resolutions (GRs) related to the three-language polic...
Starting with the 2025- 26 academic session, government schools will bring in one English-medium section at least in all classes, following a directive from the Directorate of Education (DoE). The DoE instructed all government school leaders to carry out this change in reaction to raising parental requirements in a circular published on July 8, 2025. Many parents trust that English-medium learning better trains their children for higher studies and careers in technology, science, and other professional areas.
The circular authorises school leaders to start English-medium sections in each class beginning next session. Admissions to ...
The Uttar Pradesh government has established a new scheme that offers an annual travel allowance of Rs 6,000 to students residing at least 5 km away from the...
Schools have started regarding how students sit down in classrooms in states such as Tamil Nadu, Kerala, West Bengal and Punjab. This move didn’t come ...