#Education Budget
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trendynewsnow · 25 days ago
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Oklahoma's Controversial Bible Mandate and Its Implications
The Controversial Bible Mandate in Oklahoma In June, Ryan Walters, the superintendent for public instruction in Oklahoma, made headlines by mandating that every classroom in the state must incorporate Bible teachings for students starting from fifth grade through high school. This directive raised eyebrows across the nation, but it was only the beginning of a much larger debate. Three months…
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pniindia · 4 months ago
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Education Budget 2024: 10 लाख तक का मिलेगा एजुकेशन लोन, जानिए पूरी अपडेट्स
Education Budget 2024: नई दिल्ली में वित्त मंत्री निर्मला सीतारमण आज मोदी मंत्रिमंडल के तीसरे कार्यकाल में पहला बजट पेश कर रही हैं. आम बजट 2024 में 9 चीजों को ज्यादा प्रायोरिटी पर रखा है. शिक्षा क्षेत्र से जुड़ी कई नई घोषणाएं इस बजट में की जा रही हैं.
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helloparent · 7 months ago
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Examining the Education Budget of 2024-2025: Key Insights
The financial year 2024-25 promises to be a watershed moment for Indian education, with Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman unveiling the Interim Budget, underlining the government's commitment to strengthening the country's educational foundation. A large increase in budget allocations for the Department of School Education and Literacy (DoSEL) and the Higher Education Department demonstrates a concerted effort to improve the quality and accessibility of education throughout the country.
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The Department of School Education and Literacy (DoSEL) has been granted an impressive allocation of ₹73,008.10 crore for the 2024-25 fiscal year, marking a robust increase of ₹4,203.25 crore over the previous year's budget. This upward revision signals the government's intent to strengthen the school education infrastructure and enhance learning outcomes for millions of students across the nation.
Equally noteworthy is the increment in the budget for the Higher Education Department, set at ₹47,619.77 crore for the coming fiscal year. This allocation represents a substantial rise from the ₹44,094.62 crore earmarked for the current financial year, highlighting the government's focus on elevating the standards of higher education and fostering an environment conducive to research and innovation.
The cumulative budget for the Education Ministry now stands at ₹1,20,627.87 crore, indicating a significant increase from the previous year's allocation of ₹1,12,898.97 crore. This growth in funding is poised to catalyze the transformation of the educational sector, making it more dynamic and responsive to the needs of the 21st-century learner.
Delving deeper into the specifics, the PM Schools for Rising India (PM SHRI) initiative has been a notable beneficiary, receiving ₹6,050 crore for the 2024-25 fiscal year. This increase from the previous year's allocation underscores the government's ambition to redefine the contours of school education in India, with PM SHRI schools set to become the exemplars of excellence in teaching and learning.
Also Read:  Early Childhood Education
The budgetary enhancements extend to the Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan (KVS) and Navodaya Vidyalaya Samiti (NVS), with allocations of ₹9,302.67 crore and ₹5,800 crore, respectively. These institutions are crucial to the government's vision of providing high-quality education to children from all sections of society, regardless of their geographical or economic backgrounds.
However, the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) saw a slight reduction in its budget, receiving ₹510 crore compared to ₹518.50 crore in the previous fiscal year. Despite this, the NCERT continues to play a pivotal role in shaping the educational curriculum and ensuring the dissemination of standardized learning materials across the country.
The Samagra Shiksha scheme, the cornerstone of the country's school education system, has been allocated ₹37,500 crore, maintaining its critical role in providing holistic education to students from the primary to the secondary levels.
This year's budget also shines a light on the Pradhan Mantri Poshan Shakti Nirman (PM POSHAN) scheme, which has seen its budget increase to ₹12,467.39 crore. This initiative is vital for ensuring that students receive the nutrition they need to stay healthy and focused on their studies, reinforcing the government's commitment to nurturing both the minds and bodies of India's future generations.
In conclusion, the Education Budget 2024-25 is a testament to the government's unwavering dedication to elevating the educational landscape of India. By channeling resources into both school and higher education, the budget lays a solid foundation for a brighter, more educated future, ensuring that every student has the opportunity to thrive and contribute to the nation's progress.
Originally Published Here.
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I actually could support public education in a different day and age. A quality education for lesser-privileged kids is one huge key to success for any community that wishes to flourish. I do understand Thomas Jefferson's passion for it.
The problems with it arose when it became 1. compulsory, 2. industrialized, and 3. federalized.
And the reasons it won't work today as in the past are because 1. kids can get a higher quality, cheaper education at home, 2. communities today are so diverse in values that the taxpayers would never be able to vote on good curricula, and 3. teacher education consists mainly of classroom management, not actual doctrine or pedagogy (and they aren't even permitted to manage their classrooms).
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b0bthebuilder35 · 5 months ago
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mlpoutofcontext · 1 year ago
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mishy-mashy · 10 months ago
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The Resistance squatted in abandoned buildings. They were squatters.
Before I show the panels that show they used abandoned buildings, I just want to be logical about this for a moment.
It doesn't make much sense to assume these guys - looking around jump-into-university age (18-26) - could afford to make underground bunkers and metal-plated halls all across Japan, for their base. They wouldn't have the time, resources, or even support from others to make these places.
Where do they find the metal to hammer in? The posts? The knowledge of actually building tunnels or buildings from scratch without them falling apart?
Other than that, having a single stationary base (above-ground, for example), is not going to survive. All For One's supporters fight anyone who opposes him without him needing to say anything.
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AFO rules Japan right now. Everyone is wary of each other. Look at how Bruce describes it as "the harshest era";
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As All For One's supporters attack his opposers of their own will, and supporters don't even realize they're on his side, the Resistance has to constantly be on the move. They can't really trust anyone.
They can't have stationary bases, nor can they afford ANYTHING to make them. They would've been caught immediately trying to do a big project like that, especially if they needed supplies to do so from someone who likely works for AFO, even without knowing.
Japan was in economic and social turmoil. They can't trust the market to keep going and grocery stores to be open. Look at how Japan is with All For One and Tomura; people band together and stores are looted.
Money is obsolete. Society is divided between humans and "monsters" (Ability-users). You can't trust anyone because anyone could be his pawn. Time is running up as his control spreads everyday. Resources are being looted left and right. It's too dangerous to go outside alone. Even if you have a stun gun, what does that mean against Ability-users?
So what do they do with their limited resources? Trying to hide from the big guy? What "bases" do they have?
They hunker down in abandoned places that already exist and, again, are abandoned. No one's going to come looking for them in places that people have run from and left behind. Because these places are literally just that: places no one wants anymore.
You hide a tree in a forest. You don't make a big, special base somewhere that says "I am here!", and they don't have the resources or time to burrow underground or build that.
Hide in an abandoned building among many others. There's not many people in abandoned places, if they happen to be there at all. The Resistance isn't going to be found in the deserted buildings, but they still have to keep moving, because someone might be trailing them.
When they take Yoichi from the vault,
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They're in a house. The couch is ripped, the mug is cracked, and so is the wall, with a questionable stain in the background. There are signs of fighting and abandonment, but it works.
Houses have food. Houses have clothes. Houses have beds. It's enough to sit in for a bit and heat up some water.
Not everyone packed their things and run. Some people just had to RUN. And when some places are full-on abandoned from an exodus, the Resistance is definitely gonna find some stuff there in the new "safe area".
Look below at where Kudo and Bruce hole up after Yoichi's death. No one's outside, there's a destroyed car, and there's some smoke further up the road.
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The hospital/clinic room Bruce uses is ripped apart and unsanitary, but it's still the best they can do. I think that houses and a hospital would be their best bet for survival/using as a base; resources, lodging, and some sort of safety exist there. Especially in a hospital, which would have backup generators, a camera system, and even a PA system. Hospitals have to accommodate for lots of people (food, space, lodging), and have a lot of medical equipment they can use.
Basically what I'm saying is: the Resistance likely doesn't have a permanent base. They don't have the resources or enough safety to make their own. They squat in abandoned places and move constantly, because nowhere is safe, but they can't just waltz in public and declare where they are; they have to hide in plain sight while they bide their time. In the meantime, the places they use would have to be resourceful, or they're using what they have on their backs. The manga already shows them using a house and a hospital room.
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corvidcall · 8 days ago
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idk why people think they can out-post the menswear guy, but every day im glad they keep trying so i get to see him obliterate them
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journalivm · 1 month ago
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🪴revelations in my eco friendlier quest🪴
Old eyeglass carrying case to keep change in rather than buying a new bag/container for it
Organization doesn't have to mean acquiring a new thing. It just has to work.
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garliclovershop · 15 days ago
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my coquette life planner on notion <3
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explorewithriza · 2 years ago
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Time gone never returns.
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prince-liest · 4 months ago
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Read your orchids tags and what a mood... I'm also someone who recently started having disposable income and definitely can spend money but have a lot of guilt about doing it anyway. Idk I guess it's just nice knowing that there's other people going through the same things and that adulting is Weird. I hope you get all the purple flowers! I hope we can both overcome our spending guilt!!! Raaa!!!
Aw, haha, I totally feel you anon! I've literally budgeted a certain percentage of my take-home income as "guilt free spending" and I'm pretty okay with spending it on relatively low-cost stuff, like a $20 game or whatever, but a $65 orchid seems nuts to me even though I'll probably obsess over it for months and months while the game sits unplayed in my Steam library, HAH. I keep thinking "I'm buying too much..." and then I do the math and actually, no, I'm under budget.
Starting last month is actually the first time in my life I've supported myself entirely off of my own income, and I'm 28, so I've jumped from "$100 is so much money" to, y'know, paying rent and bills and buying a couch and so on, and getting used to seeing sums of money that large come and go in my bank account has been an interesting adjustment. On top of that, I also just grew up fairly frugal. We were never in dire straits financially, but we immigrated to the USA without much money, and also, just, like... it's the broke Soviet expat attitude, hahaha. Even when we Had Money it was a matter of Should We Really Be Spending It? (Which has worked out great for my parents and made me like-minded! But even my dad has told me, like, "Worry less, it's not that much money," lol.)
I think it's not an uncommon way to feel, and sometimes I try to justify it to myself in "going to the movies" units of money. Going to a nice movie theator and having a good time without going crazy but still splurging on a snack or a drink or something runs on average about $25 and most people wouldn't consider that too unreasonable. Would this orchid be worth about three fun afternoons to me? Well, that no longer sounds excessive.
Not a super reliable measurement, but it's mostly just meant to put things into some perspective without actually being a strict judgment.
At the end of the day, though, I just tell myself that as satisfying as it is to transfer dollars into my Fidelity account to sit on like a dragon, this money is literally in my budget to enjoy on whatever. I have paid my bills. I have put money into savings and investments. I have enough for groceries. What is money for after that if not to enjoy life?
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imflyingfish · 11 months ago
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Me watching the industrial and commercial demand go up while there is low residential demand knowing that this will cause a labour shortage.
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penguin--person · 11 months ago
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Do you think they neuter mutants at the facility
you sent this ask to the wrong blog ❤️ the pafl confessions blog is here ❤️live laugh love
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itstimetodrew · 16 days ago
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I love looking up candidates for local elections because they really just count on enough people not giving a shit as their path to victory.
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thepileofclothesonyourdesk · 7 months ago
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I think part of the reason that media literacy sucks is that its supposed to be taught in English class
but they use fucking shakespeare and other old ass books
they use media that is hard for students to understand (especially if they have a learning disability or English as a second language)
and they have to explain all of the cultural context surrounding the media to a bunch of teens that dont care
use modern media that your students can understand that exists in the same context as they do
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