Government Schools In The News, Human-Animal Harmony And Other Positive News From India

From government schools in Delhi outperforming private ones to humans living in close communion with leopards, selections from the best of news India has to offer

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From government schools in Delhi outperforming private ones to humans living in close communion with leopards, selections from the best of news India has to offer

Government schools in Delhi shine

EDUCATION: Political opponents may have disagreements with the Delhi government, but no one can ignore their track record on education. Since 2015, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government in Delhi has taken bold steps to improve the quality of infrastructure and teaching in government schools, and the impact is evident.

The 2018 CBSE class 12 results are a case in point. With nearly 91 per cent of the examinees achieving a passing score, government schools in Delhi have overtaken private institutions (pass percentage of 88.35)—an achievement that would have been a distant dream some years ago, when the state of many of these schools was in a shambles.

The government in Delhi had set aside as much as 26 per cent of the 2018–19 budget for education—compared to just 3.3 per cent of its total expenditure by the union government in the 2019 interim budget. Other administrations could sure learn a lesson or two!

 

Clean solutions for water

CONSERVATION: According to the 2018 edition of the UN World Water Development Report, India is staring at a severe water crisis which will intensify around the year 2050 when 40 per cent of renewable surface water will be depleted from many regions in central India. One proposed solution to combat this is to recycle and reuse sewage water. The Nagpur Municipal Corporation (NMC) has demonstrated how to implement this on a massive scale. Three years ago, the NMC could treat only 130 million litres per day (MLD) of sewage. Today, however, it is on the cusp of raising this limit to 480 MLD—more than 90 per cent of the 525 MLD produced daily in the city. With the National Thermal Power Corporation and the Maharashtra State Power Generation Company committing to purchase the treated water for their power plants, the NMC hopes to bear the operational costs of th...

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