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Literacy rates since 1951–2009. At the time of establishment of Pakistan on 14 August 1947, the country had only one institution of higher learning, University of the Punjab and among forty colleges expanded to four provinces of Pakistan. [4]
Pak-Turk Maarif International Schools & Colleges is a chain of private international educational institutes under the umbrella of Turkish Maarif Foundation. Established in 2018, for the promotion of literacy in Pakistan, Pak-Turk Maarif has 27 branches in Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Lahore, Karachi, Khairpur, Multan, Jamshoro, Peshawar, Hyderabad and Quetta, with a total student population of more ...
Government College of Technology: Government Country College Musa Colony: Gulberg Town: Government Degree Arts and Commerce College: Landhi: Government Degree Boys College: Gulzar-e-Hijri, Gulshan Town Jungle Shah, Kemari Town Razzaqabad, Bin Qasim Town Sabzi Mandi, New Karachi Town: Government Degree Boys Post Graduate College: Gulistan-e ...
Karachi Medical and Dental College: Public 1991 Medical sciences [19] Benazir Bhutto Shaheed University: Public 2010 Medical sciences Institute of Business Administration, Karachi: Private 1955 Business studies [20] Karachi School of Business and Leadership: Private 2012 Business studies [21] Institute of Business Management: Private 1995
Institute of Business Administration, Karachi: 100.00 2: Lahore University of Management Sciences: 98.70 3: University of The Punjab: 96.00 (Karachi)]] 86.32 5: Sukkur Institute of Business Administration: 75.83 6: Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Institute of Science and Technology: 75.70 7: The Superior College. 0.30 8: Lahore School of Economics ...
The term 'ready reckoner' was coined by the schoolmaster Daniel Fenning with the publication of The ready reckoner; or trader's most useful assistant in 1757. [6] This was a modernised and extended version of Leybourn's work, which was reprinted in Boston, Massachusetts, about 1770, and translated into German in Germantown, Philadelphia, 1774. [7]
That same year marked the graduation of the first class from the university's School of Nursing. The inauguration of Aga Khan University Hospital in Karachi followed in 1985. The university's medical college witnessed its first batch of graduates in 1989. In 1994, the Institute for Educational Development in Karachi was inaugurated.
The college was established on 22 June 1945 under Basant Singh Asumal College of Commerce & Economics, and was inaugurated by Rao Bahadur Seth Shivrattan G. Mohatta. The college was taken under the supervision of the Government of Sindh in 1948 after the establishment of Pakistan. The current building of the college was constructed in 1967. [4]