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Karachi Grammar School was founded as the Anglo-Indian School in 1847. It remained the only non-native school in the town until St. Patrick's High School, Karachi, was founded in 1861, followed by St. Joseph's Convent School, Karachi, in 1862, and Manora School in 1866. Reverend Henry Brereton, the First Chaplain of Karachi, established the ...
Karachi's educational system is divided into five levels: primary (grades one through five); middle (grades six through eight); high (grades nine and ten, leading to the Secondary School Certificate); intermediate (grades eleven and twelve, leading to a Higher Secondary School Certificate); and university programs at undergraduate and graduate level.
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The Zoroastrian residents of Karachi, feeling the need for imparting religious education and knowledge of Gujarati, opened on 23 May 1859, “The Parsi Balakshala,” or children's school. In June 1862, Seth Shapurji Hormusji Soparivala was appointed the secretary of the school.
In March 1916, the school had 1477 students, of whom 1350 were Hindus, 32 Brahmins, 10 Jains, 12 Muslims, 66 Parsis and 7 Indian Jews. After Partition in Pakistan 1947, the Sindh Assembly convened in that building to carry out their meetings and tasks. Eventually they shifted and the building was converted back into a school.
Karachi (Intermediate) 1974 Karachi Division [19] [20] Karachi (Secondary) 1950 [21] Larkana: 1995 Larkana Division [22] [23] Mirpur Khas: 1973 Mirpur Khas Division, Sanghar District [24] Sukkur: 1979 Sukkur District, Khairpur, District Ghotki, [25] [26] Shaheed Benazirabad 2015
St Patrick's High School is a Catholic primary and secondary school located in Saddar Town, Sindh, Karachi, Pakistan. Founded by the Jesuits in 1861, the school is the second-oldest school in Karachi. [1] Since 1950, it has been run by the diocesan clergy of the Archdiocese of Karachi. [1]
Mama Parsi Girls' Secondary School was founded on 1 April 1918 by Jamshed Nusserwanjee Mehta who collected three donations to establish the school. At first the new Parsi girls' school functioned in a portion of the Bai Virbaijee School, and was only opened for the parsi community but later on Muhammad Ali Jinnah's request the school allowed ...