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The Karnataka Secondary Education Examination Board, came into existence in the year 1966 and got merged with Department of Pre-University Education, Karnataka and got officially renamed as Karnataka School Examination and Assessment Board, abbreviation as KSEAB in 2022, is a state school education board of Karnataka. KSEAB came into existence ...
To maximize attendance, the Karnataka Government has launched a midday meal scheme in government and aided schools in which free lunch is provided to the students. [ 5 ] At the end of secondary education, the students pursuing the Class 10th have to pass an examination called the Secondary School Leaving Certificate (SSLC)or Secondary School ...
Secondary school is split into 2 parts (grades 9–10 and grades 11–12) with a standardised nationwide examination at the end of grade 10 and grade 12 (colloquially referred to as "board exams"). Grade 10 examination results can be used for admission into grades 11–12 at a secondary school, pre-university programme, or a vocational or ...
At the age of 12, he left to Thiruvarur to start his high school. [31] Karunanidhi started to organise school students for the anti-Hindi agitations. [32] The deaths of two anti-Hindi agitators by the police made a profound impact on him. [33] At the age of 13, he wrote his first Tamil historical novel titled Selvachandira. [20]
By 1995, of all federal government jobs in India – 10.1 per cent of Class I, 12.7 per cent of Class II, 16.2 per cent of Class III, and 27.2 per cent of Class IV jobs were held by Dalits. [38] Of the most senior jobs in government agencies and government-controlled enterprises, only 1 per cent were held by Dalits, not much change in 40 years.
Karnataka was divided between the Bombay Presidency, the Kingdom of Mysore and the Nizam of Hyderabad. India became Independent in 1947, and according to the States Reorganization Act, 1956, the Kannada-speaking areas of Hyderabad State, Madras State were unified with Mysore State. The state was renamed as Karnataka in 1973.
[7] [8] [9] Though some scholars have argued that the Dravidian languages may have been brought to India by migrations from the Iranian plateau in the fourth or third millennium BCE, [10] [11] or even earlier, [12] [13] the reconstructed vocabulary of proto-Dravidian suggests that the family is indigenous to India.
At the time of the 2011 Census of India, the total population in Karnataka was 6.25 crores (a crore equates to 10 million), with 50.9% being males and 49.1% females. There was a decadal population increase of 17.3% between 1991 and 2001.