In India which hosts a population of diverse religions and degrees of conservatism, the country’s top-ranked girls boarding schools continue to serve the very useful purpose of providing egalitarian education to girl children. Here are India’s Top Girls Boarding Schools 2017-18
However, in India which hosts a population with diverse religions and degrees of conservatism, the country’s top-ranked girls boarding schools have served — and continue to serve — the very useful purpose of providing high quality, egalitarian primary-secondary education to girl children from upper middle class households. But the fact that the EW league table of all-girls boarding schools comprises only 15 institutions which are sufficiently well-known to be rated and ranked, tells its own story.
Be that as it may, in this year’s league table of girls boarding schools there’s a rearrangement of the seating at top table. The long reign of the Dehradun-based Welham Girls is over with the relatively low-profile Scindia Kanya Vidyalaya, Gwalior (SKV, estb.1956) ranked #1 by this year’s sample respondents. With high ratings under the parameters of leadership, internationalism and community service, SKV has pipped Welham Girls, Dehradun and Mayo College Girls, Ajmer which are jointly ranked second, at the post.
“A cloudburst of euphoria enveloped our school when we got the news that after several years among the Top 3, this year’s sample respondents have rated and ranked SKV India’s #1 girls boarding school. The moment will be etched in the collective memory of the school. SKV has been on a fascinating journey of self-discovery over the past few years. We have rediscovered our strengths, challenged our weaknesses and embraced opportunities. In the process of reinventing ourselves, we have come closer to embodying the spirit of SKV which our founder the late Rajmata Vijaya Raje Scindia, had breathed into this institution. I believe that by attaining this top-ranking we have realised her dream of building an education institution that gives strong women to the country,” says Nishi Misra, a history and education postgraduate of Allahabad University and former principal of the Vidya Devi Jindal School, Hissar (Haryana) who was appointed principal of SKV in 2010, since when this low-profile school ranked #21 in 2012 began its upward trajectory. While expressing satisfaction with SKV’s top rating on the parameter of community service (“a defining factor of life at SKV”), Misra modestly declined to comment on the school’s top rating/ on the criterion of leadership/quality of management.
In this year’s Top 5 table there are two new entrants — the Vidya Devi Jindal School for Girls, Hissar (Haryana) and the Mody School, Lakshmangarh, Rajasthan (MSL, estb. 1989), jointly ranked #5. Meeta Sharma, an alumna of North-Eastern University, Shillong and University College, London, who served a long stint (2004-16) as a science teacher at the top-ranked The Doon School before she was appointed principal of MSL, is elated by this all-girls’ school’s steady progress up the EW league table.
Further down the all-girls boarding schools league table, the Birla Balika Vidyapeeth, Pilani, (6) and Guru Nanak Fifth Centenary, Mussoorie (7) have improved their positions reflecting the better rankings of almost all home-grown, indigenously developed schools across all categories.
Clearly, even if belatedly, there’s a new wind blowing across K-12 education in India.
To view Girls Boarding Schools Rankings 2017, please visit: http://www.educationworld.in/rank-school/all-cities/boarding-school/girls/2017.html