Monthly Newsletter | October 2025 | Volume 74
October 2025 comes out as a month of reform, renewed direction, and reflection for the country’s education environment. From classroom inclusivity to nutrition and child safety, the month highlights India’s evolving dedication to equitable and holistic education environments.
The High Court of Delhi ruling on comprehensive learning specifies private school responsibility, assuring that students with disabilities discover support and fair access. CBSE’s new capacity-building programmes concentrate on improving teaching skills, affirming that educator growth remains the foundation of quality education.
School safety transparency takes middle stage as the HC of Mumbai mandates public access to safety compliance information, building up accountability and trust throughout schools in Maharashtra. Nutrition takes a critical turn as well in Pune, where schools cover the motto “Junk Out, Nutrition In,” fostering healthy eating habits to fight childhood obesity.
The highlight of Delhi’s preschool quality research sheds light on safety, hygiene gaps, and early learning eco-space. Moreover, Chandigarh faces gender issues, with girl enrolments lagging, reminding officials to expand inclusivity drives and awareness. These developments reflect a picture of this month as the country’s education segment not only measured its gaps but also visualised a more student-centred and responsible future.
The Delhi HC ruled on Tuesday (23.9.2025) that the preparations for reasonable accommodation and comprehensive education under the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act apply not only to governme...
In a greater measure coordinated with the NEP 2020, the CBSE has brought in new Capacity Building Programmes to fortify continuous professional growth for teachers throughout its affiliated schools...
The Mumbai HC on Tuesday (30.09.2025) guided the Maharashtra School Education Department to issue schools’ details in compliance with the Government Resolution on child sa...
In Pune, at Symbiosis Primary School, kitchen staff serve hot meals such as curries, salads, and khichdis very fresh, assuring the right mix of proteins, fibre, and carbohydrates. The menu keeps off sandwiches, burger buns, poori-sabzi, colas, and bread pakoras. Nutritionists plan and observe the school menu, handling a no-tolerance policy for fast and junk food items, even during birthdays and festive occasions. “We limit sugar, fat, and salt in the mid-day meal programme as these influence food addictions, and eating behaviour”, says the academic admin at the Faculty of Medical & Health Science, Symbiosis International Un...
A new study by Jamia Millia Islamia researchers shows that Delhi government preschools outperform Delhi private preschools in infrastructure quality, as priv...
Girls' enrolment in Chandigarh schools stays lower than that of boys. Based on the information from the Education Department for the year 2024–25, 1204...