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Non-Government Teachers' Registration and Certification Authority was established in 2005 by the Government of Bangladesh. [1] [4] [5] It holds annual Teachers Registration Examinations in Bangladesh. In 2017, 527,757 candidates took the examination and 147,262 of them passed.
In 1978 the Madrasah Education Board was formed under Ordinance for the Modernization of Madrasah Education. The board has faced difficulties in recruiting teachers for science related classes. [ 6 ] In 2017 Bangladesh government removed references to Jihad from books of Madrasah Education Board.
Non-Government Teachers' Registration and Certification Authority (NTRCA) Bangladesh National Commission of UNESCO (BNCU) Prime Minister's Education Assistance Trust; International Mother Language Institute; Non-Government Teacher Employee Retirement Benefit Board; Non-government Teachers and Employees Welfare Trust
Qawmi madrasahs account for 1.9% of total primary enrollment and 2.2% of secondary enrollment; Alia madrasahs account for 8.4% of primary and 19% of secondary enrollment. [60] The alia system is like the general education system, except that Arabic is taught in addition to general education.
The Government of Bangladesh split the Education Ministry into two divisions, Technical and Madrasah Education Division and Secondary and Higher Education Division, on 30 November 2016. [4] It received 7,453 crore taka budget in 2019 which was a slight increase over the last year.
Tanzeem-ul-Madaris Ahl-e-Sunnat was formed in 1959 in Lahore. The board examination and scheme covers boys' and girls' madrassas of Pakistan. [7] [8] The board is affiliated with HEC Islamabad Pakistan and Madrasah Education Board (PMEB) under Ordinance No.XL of 2001. [9]
Befaqul Madarisiddinia Bangladesh or National Religious Madrasa Education Board of Bangladesh (Arabic: وفاق المدارس الدينية بنغلاديش) is a government-recognized Qawmi Madrasa Board of Education in Bangladesh. [1] It is the newest of the Qawmi Madrasa education boards in Bangladesh. [2]
The Arabic word madrasa (plural: madaris) generally has two meanings: (1) in its more common literal and colloquial usage, it simply means "school"; (2) in its secondary meaning, a madrasa is an educational institution offering instruction in Islamic subjects including, but not limited to, the Quran, the sayings (hadith) of the Prophet Muhammad, jurisprudence (fiqh), and law.