Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya, Rampura

Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya, Neemuch is a co-educational government residential school in Rampura town in Neemuch district in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh.[1] It was established in 1987 by Navodaya Vidyalaya Samiti, a registered Society under Registration of Societies Act, 1860 and an autonomous body under the Department of School Education & Literacy, Ministry of Human Resource Development, Govt. of India. It is a C.B.S.E affiliated school primarily aims at identification and development of talented school children predominantly from rural areas who are denied good educational opportunities. The school provides reservation as per mandate of Govt. of India, at least 75% selection of students from rural areas, maximum 25% from urban areas and fixed 33% to girl students. The admission process goes through a district level entrance test called Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya Selection Test (JNVST) to select 80 students out of total class V passed appearing students. The school provides lateral admission to very limited seats of students of class IX and class XI in class X and XII respectively. It provides boarding, lodging, and medical to students at nominal fee of 200 per month. The students belonging to SC, ST, and disabled categories including girl students and students below the poverty line are provided exemption from the fee.

Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya, Neemuch
JNV Rampura
Location
Rampura, Neemuch


,
458118

Coordinates26.8696°N 84.5394°E / 26.8696; 84.5394
Information
School typeGovernment Public
MottoPragyanam Brahma
Established1987
ChairpersonDistrict Magistrate of Indore district
PrincipalMr. S. K. Mohapatra
GradesVI — XII
Genderco-educational
Campus size32 acre
Campus typeUrban
HousesHouses in JNV
Colour(s)Houses in JNV
SloganCome in to learn, go out to serve.
AffiliationsC.B.S.E
Websitewww.jnvneemuch.org

Admissions

Admission to the Vidyalaya is based on an annual merit test, called Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya Selection Test (JNVST), designed, developed and conducted by NCERT earlier and now by the CBSE, except lateral admissions in the class IX and XI to the very limited seats. The merit test is held annually apparently on the first Sunday in the month of February, at district level open to all students who have studying class V in the current year.

Facilities

It offers free education to talented children from Class VI to XII. It provides free boarding and lodging, expenses on uniforms, text books, stationery, and things of daily usage. However, a nominal fee 200 per month is charged from students of Class IX to XII in welfare of Vidyalaya called Vidyalaya Vikas Nidhi. The students belonging to Scheduled Caste, Scheduled Tribes, Physically handicapped category and families below the poverty line and all girls students excluding any category are relaxed from the fee.

Infrastructure & Other facilities

  • Separate hostel and mess for boys and girls.
  • Sports ground, music rooms & other spacious classrooms and a library, with no membership required.
  • Boarding, Lodging, Uniform, Text-Books, Stationary, Daily usage stuffs, etc. to each and every student of the Vidyalaya, free of cost.
  • Internet, Wi-Max connectivity to expose students of the Vidyalaya to the global activities.

Academic

The Regional language is the default medium of learning from Class-VI to VII. And later it changes to English for Science and Mathematics and Hindi for Humanities subjects, particularly class VIII onward.

Affiliation

The school is affiliated to the Central Board of Secondary Education, New Delhi (which conducts the CBSE exams in grades, i.e. classes 10 & 12).

Migration scheme

It offers migration scheme through which the inter-regional exchange of Hindi and Non-Hindi speaking students occurs between Vidyalayas situated in different States. It takes place for one academic year based on first come basis against very limited seats.

gollark: Personally I figure that schools are wildly inefficient at actually transmitting knowledge and skills anyway, so meh.
gollark: It would just be exam revision for me at school, being year 11, so not much actual learning anyway.
gollark: Yes, but they do *sometimes* confiscate them and it would be a hassle to have to pick it up again later.
gollark: As a somewhat more rule-abiding person I mostly don't, although the cost/benefit probably does come out in favour.
gollark: Yes. Quite a lot of people use them anyway and just deal with them being confiscated occasionally.

See also

References

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