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The Gujarat board was formed on the basis of 'The Gujarat Secondary Education Act 1972'. and conducts the state level exam. The main academic task of GSEB is the preparation of syllabus for secondary schools and also the recommendation of text-books to be taught in government schools as well as registered private schools.
Safari (Gujarati: સફારી) is a monthly science and general knowledge magazine published in Gujarati and English language, by Harshal Publications, Ahmedabad in Gujarat, India. Its editor and publisher is Nagendra Vijay. [1]
The school follows GSEB curriculum which is the state board of The Government of Gujarat. It has classes from kindergarten to class 10 in both English and Gujarati medium. It uses continuous and comprehensive evaluation. [2] It also has classes 11 and 12 in both science and commerce streams, the latter only in English medium.
The UGNB publishes books in Gujarati at a break-even prices for university and college students. By 2015, it has published over 1485 books in the humanities , social sciences , basic sciences , applied sciences , law, education, agriculture, animal husbandry and veterinary sciences , journalism, commerce and management, as well as dictionaries.
There are several universities functioning in Gujarat which offers both undergraduate and postgraduate programs in various disciplines. The Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda is the only English medium university in Gujarat. It was ranked by India Today at the Tenth Place in its list of India's Best Universities (Aug 2011 Issue); while ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; ... Pages in category "Gujarati-language books" The following 27 pages are in this category, out ...
The Native Schools and Books Society established in Bombay in 1820 had published books for new schools. They were for co-curriculum reading. Initial works in Gujarati children's literature were translations and adaptations. In 1826, Bapulal Shastri Pandya translated Aesop's Fables in Gujarati as Aesop Nitikathao. In next few years more ...
He founded the first science magazine in the Gujarati language called Scope and wrote several books. The Nagendra Vijay Science Foundation also launched the English-language science magazine Safari, in March 2008, [2] [3] of which he is the Editor-in-Chief. He had previously published newsweekly Flash and a science magazine Scope. [1]