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Rawalpindi SSC supplementary exam results 2008
RBISE SSC supple exams results declared
| Rawalpindi, Nov 13: Rawalpindi Board of
Intermediate and Secondary Education (RBISE) on Wednesday declared results of
Secondary School Certificate (SSC) supplementary examinations, 2008 with 46.17
pass percentage. |
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RBISE Public Relation Officer (PRO) Arslan Cheema said
that 26,065 students submitted admission forms to the board. Of them, 25,822
students appeared in the examinations, but 11,917 were declared
successful.
Giving break-up of the statistics, he said that 17,116 male
students submitted forms and 16,924 of them sat in the examinations. He said
that 8,949 female students submitted the forms and 8,898 of them appeared in the
examinations.
Your Comments
"I dont understand what is going on in pakistan ,every systems have been crashed . there is so curuption in every where, one can not even imagin. Currently if some one see the results of secondery boards of education , how they have declared the results . In first result a lot of mistakes were found and the pujab govt decided to recheck the papers again and the pujab board of education also promised the students that they will recheck the papers and then result will be reanoucd. But what happen,when the result is reanounced the students who were declared pass in first result,they are failed or most of the students who were pass , they have been failed in two or three papers and they will reappear in final . I dont understand that this result is correct or the first one was correct.I dont know how the Govt official are justifying the results . I am surprised ,why the secondry board of education are playing with the students and also with the parents.The govt secondry board of education official should feel shame with their bad performance, the prime minister of pakistan should take proper notice of it and i will also request the chief justice of pakistan ,he should also take the notice of it . The secondry board of education should feel the responsibilities and they should not spoil the future of studends rather than that the future of pakistn."
Name: Muhammad Akram
Email:excellent78654@yahoo.com
City, Country: Cordoba, Spain
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Unavailability of IT teachers in Punjab: No computer classes in Punjab govt schools after Sept
Rawalpindi: Hundreds of class 9 and 10 students from the Punjab government schools who had
opted for computer studies are worried about the unavailability of
teachers.
The information technology (IT) teachers in the Punjab
government schools were employed on contract basis, which had expired on
September 31. In Rawalpindi district computer centres have been set up in 28
high schools.
The teachers are not taking classes and planning to quit,
as they have not got salaries after expiry of contract and the government has
not yet renewed their contract.
Contract renewal: A teacher confided on Wednesday that on the one hand the government claimed that it was
providing maximum facilities to teachers, on the other it had not yet renewed
contract of hundreds of computer teachers. He said according to his information
there were more than 500 high schools in the Punjab province. He said if the
government did not renew the contracts it would render many teachers jobless. He
said the chief minister should take note of this issue.
Muhammad Aamir, a
10th class student, said for the last two months no computer class was held in
their school and the Secondary School Certificate (SSC) examination of
Rawalpindi Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education was about to start from
March 7, 2009.
Malik Imran, another 10th class student, said only three
and half months had left to their exams and due to unavailability of teacher no
computer class had been held since the end of September. He said now they had no
choice to change the subject.
Executive District Officer (Education)
Chaudhry Muhammad Yousaf said the provincial government had the authority to
renew contract of the teachers. He said the Rawalpindi district had only 26
computer teachers.
Punjab Teachers Association Rawalpindi Division
President Saghir Alam said students were suffering due to unavailability of IT
teachers.
He said science students were given the option whether to have
a combination of Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics and Biology or Physics,
Chemistry, Mathematics and Computer subjects. He said more students opted for
computer subject due to job opportunities as computer operators.
Saghir
said winter vacations would start in next month and there would be no computer
class in the last quarter of this year.
Computer centres: District
Officer Monitoring Mohammad Awais said that Punjab Chief Minister
Mian Shahbaz Sharif had directed the authorities to set up computer centres in
every high school in the province.
He said they had prepared a plan and
divided schools in to three categories to start the computer classes. He said in
category 'A' schools classrooms, furniture and electricity were already
available and the government had to only provide computers to start classes
soon.
In category 'B' schools, classrooms and electricity were available
and the government had to arrange furniture for setting up computer labs, he
said, adding, while the category 'C' schools had no proper classroom and the
electricity.
Awais said they had asked the principals of such schools,
which were 12 in number in the district to make arrangements for electricity
connection as soon as possible. He said the government would pay 70 percent
expenditure for getting the power connection while the school had to pay only
the rest 30 percent. Daily Times
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CSS faces shortage of suitable candidates
Islamabad: The Central Superior Services (CSS), once the most
sought after and privileged cadre among government services, is facing a
shortage of suitable candidates to fill its vacant posts.
Because of
unavailability of suitable candidates for the past three years, the Federal
Public Service Commission (FPSC) has had to carry over vacant seats to the
following year and almost all government departments are facing a shortage of
qualified young officers.
In the past, several candidates used to compete
for every CSS seat and the service attracted the country's finest
graduates.
Last year, the establishment division reported 299 vacancies
to be filled on the basis of competitive examination in various occupational
groups, but the commission could find only 189 appropriate candidates, leaving
110 seats vacant.
During the competitive examination of 2006, the FPSC
had to leave 47 vacancies for the following year. In 2005, 25 seats were not
filled.
According to the annual report for the competitive exam of 2006,
22 seats of urban Sindh remained vacant, 17 of rural Sindh, six of Azad Jammu
and Kashmir and two of Balochistan. The commission got the required number of
qualified candidates for the seats allotted to Punjab and NWFP.
Under the
quota system, 50 per cent of seats go to Punjab and the Federal Capital Area, 19
per cent to Sindh, 11.5 per cent to the NWFP, six per cent to Balochistan, four
per cent to the Northern Areas and Federally Administrated Tribal Areas and two
per cent to Azad Kashmir. The percentage of positions allocated on open merit is
7.5.
A retired federal secretary, Khwaja Zaheer, alleged successive
governments had taken extra-constitutional steps to destroy the civil services.
"Inefficient officers got promotions, while hardworking and intelligent ones
were victimised for their honesty and dedication," he said.
A District
Management Group (DMG) officer said the private sector offered far better perks
and privileges to potential candidates, rendering the CSS unattractive for
outstanding graduates. He said there was an urgent need for transformation of
the civil services.
An assistant commissioner of income tax who is
studying for an MBA degree as a part of his training termed the new examination
system introduced by the FPSC a major hurdle in filling vacant seats. He said
more candidates were failing after the commission changed the format of question
papers a few years ago. Dawn
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Education dept bans recruitments
Rawalpindi: Despite receiving applications from intending
candidates, the District Education Department has banned recruitment for about
950 vacancies of grade-IV, sources said. They said the department was to appoint
candidates as security guards, gardeners, naib qasid and baildars at different
educational institutions of Rawalpindi district. They said the department had
received applications to fill 800 vacant posts of colleges and 150 of schools.
On the other hand, office-bearers of a teachers' union said that administrative
affairs of educational institutions would further deteriorate if the ban on
recruitments was not lifted. Daily Times
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| Education News | | Updated: 25 May, 2012 |
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