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Sekolah Agama Bantuan Kerajaan (SABK) or Government-funded Religious School (Arabic: المدرسة الدينية الممولة من الحكومة) is a type of institutional group of education established and managed by the Malaysian Ministry of Education (MOE). [1]
The Razak Report recommended the formation of six units of Sekolah Berasrama Penuh (SBP), namely Sekolah Dato 'Abdul Razak (1956), Sekolah Tun Fatimah (1956), Sekolah Tuanku Abdul Rahman (1957), Sekolah Menengah Sultan Abdul Halim (1963), Sekolah Sultan Alam Shah (1963) and Sekolah Seri Puteri (1968).
Sekolah Menengah Agama Dato' Klana Petra Maamor; Maahad Ahmadi, Gemencheh (previously known as Sekolah Agama Menengah Atas Dan Senawi - abbreviated SAMAS) Sheikh Haji Mohd Said Religious Institution (SMK (A) Sheikh Haji Mohd Said - also abbreviated SMKA SHAMS) Sekolah Menengah Agama Persekutuan Labu
During its early establishment, SMAPK was temporarily posted at Sekolah Menengah Agama Persekutuan Labu, Negeri Sembilan for about 6 months. The registration for the first students intake for this school was held on 13 January 1990. 153 students of Form 1 had registered and received their learning from only 5 teachers including the first principal, En. Mohd. Saim Ithnin.
Three years of junior high school (Sekolah Menengah Pertama, or SMP) follows elementary school. [11] Some schools offer an accelerated learning program in which students who perform well can complete the level in two years. There are academic and vocational junior high schools that lead to senior-level diplomas.
7.1 Sekolah Berasrama Penuh (Kerajaan) ... Sekolah Menengah Islam Al-Amin Bestari D'Merlimau; ... Sekolah Menengah Arab.
Brunei: mostly sekolah menengah (English translation: secondary school), a few maktab (English translation: college) Bulgaria: cредно образование (grades 8–12) Canada: High school, junior high or middle school, secondary school, école secondaire, collegiate institute, polyvalente; Chile: enseñanza media
Establishment of Sekolah Menengah Sultan Abdul Halim line to meet the development needs in the field of Malay-medium education in Malaysia after independence. In 1958, a Malay-medium secondary degrees has been opened in Sultan Abdul Hamid College, Alor Setar with enrolment of 31 people. The number of students has increased to 791 people in 1963.