The country’s well-funded 1,117 Central government-promoted Kendriya Vidyalayas and 596 Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya schools dominate the EW league tables of government day and boarding schools
The narrative however changes when it comes to the 1,117 Central government-promoted Kendriya Vidyalayas with an aggregate enrolment of 1.2 million students countrywide. These ‘model’ government schools, established for the education of children of transferable government employees and managed by the Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan – provided generous allocation in annual Union budgets (Rs.3,795 crore in 2016-17) – are nationally reputed for academic and co-curricular excellence. Unsurprisingly, in the second EW Government Day Schools Rankings, they dominate the government day schools league table with seven KV’s featuring in the Top 10.
The 1,067 respondents including parents, principals and teachers polled by Delhi-based C fore have once again voted Kendriya Vidyalaya, Pattom (estb.1964) India’s #1 government day school with top ratings for competence of faculty, sports education and leadership/management. “This is a moment of great joy and pride not only for KV Pattom but the Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan. KV Pattom has a good record not only for academic excellence but also for co-curricular and sports achievements. In the national level sports meet organised by the School Games Federation of India last year, seven of our students were selected to represent the country. Its this focus on all-round education that has won us the respect of your knowledgeable survey respondents”, says S. Ajayakumar, a science and education postgraduate of Kerala University who began his career as a KV teacher in Manipur in 1992 and has since served as principal of KV schools in Mankhurd (Mumbai), Kumbhirgram (Assam), Delhi Cantt, prior to being appointed principal of KV Pattom in 2003. Currently KV Pattom has an aggregate enrolment of 4,114 students including 2,047 girls, mentored by 163 teachers.
A notable feature of the EW government day schools league table is that of the seven KVs ranked within the Top 10, four are from the southern state of Kerala, the country’s most literate state (94 percent).
The minority of state government schools included in the Top 10 government day schools league table are the Government Vocational and Higher Secondary School for Girls, Nadakkavu, Kozhikode – which received Rs.16 crore makeover funding from the Dubai-based Faizal and Shabana Foundation in 2014 – at #4 (3), the previously unranked Rajkiya Pratibha Vikas Vidyalaya (RPVV), Dwarka, Delhi #5 and Jadavpur Vidyapith #6.
Promoted in 2010 by the Nitish Kumar-led JD (S) government as a “model government residential school”, this English medium class VI-XII school affiliated with the Bihar School Examinations Board, has an enrolment of 443 boarders including 233 girls. “I am grateful to my colleagues and students whose efforts have helped us retain the #1 rank for the second consecutive year. Despite the school being only six years old, 36 of our students have cleared the National Means-cum-Merit Scholarship examination of the State Council of Education Research and Training. We are committed to continuous improvement and our objective is to transform SAV into the best residential school in the country”, says Dr. Rajiv Ranjan, an alumnus of S.K.M. University, Dumka, Jharkhand who served in a higher secondary school in Bhutan for 11 years before taking charge as principal of SAV in 2011.
Ranked second among government boarding schools this year is the previously unranked CBSE-affiliated Oak Grove School, Dehradun, established way back in 1888 by the East India Railway Company and currently administered by Indian Railways. The remaining eight slots in the ten-strong EW government boarding schools league are awarded to Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya schools, promoted and managed by the Central government (see league table on p.276).
Conceptualised in 1984 by the late prime minister Rajiv Gandhi (1944-91) as free co-educational boarding schools modelled on India’s public (i.e exclusive, private) schools for the brightest and best students of rural India, the country’s 596 Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalayas have built an enviable reputation for offering free-of-charge high-quality education to students selected on merit in rural India.
Sujata Choudhury
To view EW India Government Day School Rankings visit https://www.educationworld.in/rank-school/all-cities/day-school/government/2016.html
To view EW India Government Boarding Schools Rankings visit https://www.educationworld.in/rank-school/all-cities/boarding-school/government/2016.html