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Chimi Yangzom Wangchuck, Princess of Bhutan, Vice President of the Bhutan Youth Development Foundation; Dechen Yangzom Wangchuck, Princess of Bhutan, Representative of His Majesty The King for people’s welfare in Mongar [citation needed] Jigme Dorji Wangchuck, Prince of Bhutan, Representative of His Majesty The King in the Eastern Region of ...
Bhutan's coeducational school system in 1988 encompassed a reported 42,446 students and 1,513 teachers in 150 primary schools, 11,835 students and 447 teachers in 21 junior high schools, and 4,515 students and 248 teachers in 9 high schools. [1] Males accounted for 63 percent of all primary and secondary students. [1]
3rd class (Rang a trí, 8–9 years) 4th class (Rang a ceathair, 9–10 years) 5th class (Rang a cúig, 10–11 years) 6th class (Rang a sé, 11–12 years) Junior and Senior infants correspond to Kindergarten. The subjects mainly taught in primary school are:
Motithang Higher Secondary School (Dzongkha: མུ་ཏིག་ཐང་འབྲིང་རིམ་སློབ་གྲྭ་གོང་མ) is a government high school in the capital city of Thimphu, Bhutan. It was established in the year 1975.
Bhutan is ranked as "Partly Free" by Freedom House. [111] Bhutan's parliament decriminalised homosexuality in 2020. [112] Women in Bhutan tend to be less active in politics than men due to customs and aspects of Bhutan's culture that dictate a woman's role in the household. [113] This leads to a limitation of their voices in government.
Under the direction and guidance of Khenpo Sonam Tshewang, the first dedicated Translation Class began at Nalanda Buddhist Institute in 2013. The Translation Class is a three year course where students focus on learning and improving English speaking, vocabulary, reading, and writing skills.
As part of the Dalai Lama's visit to Miami University, Geshe Kalsang Damdul and Geshe Jampel Kakpa, of Dharamshala, India, turned two pages of the book as honorary guests. [5] A smaller edition of the book was published in November 2004. The miniature version of 216 pages is 17.2 x 12.5 inches (320 mm).
In Bhutan, eighteen different languages are spoken; and of those only Dzongkha has a native literary tradition. The other literary languages, Nepali and Lepcha, have not featured in Bhutan's own literature. In Western Bhutan the predominant language is Dzongkha, in the east it is Tshangla and along the southern belt it is Nepali. Several other ...