National Academy For Learning

The National Academy for Learning (NAFL) is a school in Basaveshwaranagar, Bangalore, India, founded by K.P. Gopalkrishna in 1994. The Principal is Mrs. Indira Jayakrishnan and Administrator is Mrs. Ajita Satish. The school is located on 3rd Cross, 3rd Block, 3rd Stage of a west Bangalore suburb, Basaveshwara Nagar.

National Academy for Learning, Basaveshwaranagar
Chairman Dr. Gopalkrishna
Principal Ms. Indira Jayakrishnan [1]
Location Basaveshwaranagar, Bangalore, India
Type: Private School
School motto: Aspire, Achieve, Excel
Colors: White, blue         

NAFL is a day school offering classes from Montessori and Kindergarten to Grade 12. There is no prescribed syllabus that the school follows until Grade 9. For higher grades, NAFL offers the Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations (CISCE) program. The school also offers the Cambridge International Examinations program for Class 10 (Cambridge Secondary 2 for 14 to 16-year-olds) and the Cambridge Advanced program for Classes 11 and 12 (the Cambridge International A Level which is typically a two-year course, and the Cambridge International AS Level which is typically a one-year program). In grade 9 students are also given the option between ICSE and the CAIE IGCSE.

Class size

The typical NAFL class size is 25 students. If more students are enrolled, the school breaks the class into multiple sections. The school requires each student to be in uniform, the color of which depends upon one of three houses the student is in.

Transport

NAFL operates school-private buses to Bangalore. The school works on a 5-day a week schedule. The school has a high walled-compound with a gate that is shut at 8 AM, the gates are opened again at 3 PM when class is dismissed.

The school has a sports ground and is located in a residential neighborhood. Four other private schools also operate in the area creating traffic chaos each day at school start and end times. Beginning 12 June 2014, the school implemented procedures to ease this burden by directing traffic to both rear and front gates of the school compound.

Academic year

The academic year starts the first week of June and runs to the first week of October (Term 1). After a break of about 2 weeks for Dasarah, the school reconvenes for Term 2 which runs to 31 March. The school is off for a week during Christmas. The weeks that end each term are marked by tests and assessments.

Extra-curricular

Important extra-curricular activities are the NAFL Sports Day during Term 1 and the NAFL DAY (Music, Drama, Arts) for Term 2. An out-of-town school trip is planned for grades 6 and above during Term 2. towards the end of the year NAFL has an event called the Show and Tell for students to showcase what they have learned during the year.

Report card

The school's report card is an assessment of a students work. The Co-Curricular Evaluation includes assessments in Reading, Library Education, Art, PE, Indian Music, Dance/Drama, Work Experience and Western Music. Each of these categories has four sub-categories (for example, Reading breaks down into Interest, Imagination, Verbal Skills and Group Activity). The school's Personality Development assessment includes areas such as Courtesy, Confidence, Care of Belongings, Neatness, Regularity and Punctuality, Initiative, Sharing and Caring, Respect of Others' Property and Self-Discipline.

Communication

The school sends out circulars, mostly once a month, to communicate with parents, these circulars are generally sent by mail to avoid the use of paper. Beginning June 2014, the school has started communicating with parents by e-mail. Teachers use email or social media and are approachable by phone. School and home work assignments continue to be communicated through a daily diary that students need to maintain. By requiring parents to sign the dairy daily, however, the school prefers to have the parents to stay involved. Handwritten notes between teacher and parent - all recorded in the student's diary - continue to be the norm even to request a meeting.

Demographic

The student demographic is largely made up of Indian families who have had some exposure to the west, mostly the United States. Many children were born in the US, raised there for a few years before returning to India when their families relocated. Or students have parents who are professionals who were themselves either schooled in the west or who travel to western countries on a regular basis. This gives the school a quasi-international flair while it retains a largely Indian approach to education, academic discipline, arts and culture. For example, for Bastille Day (the French National Day on 14 July), all students wear French colors to school just as they do for the Indian Independence Day (15 Aug). The school requires students to attend both Indian and Western music classes each week.

Fees

The tuition fees charged for new students (especially those returning from abroad) are higher. If students stay for two years, their fees drop as they are considered to be "in-state". Many teachers are veterans having served in the school for most of its existence. Some were transferred into the school from the school's parent National Public School. Most children from NPS Rajajinagar, who are not admitted, are sent to NAFL, as they are close by and are sister schools.

Sister schools

gollark: Ox or not ox?
gollark: We need pancakes as a food item. *Nuclear* pancakes. <@372304663707385857>.
gollark: I might do pancake-MSRs.
gollark: Pancake reactors are cool.
gollark: I'd accept any size from 5x1x5 to 15x1x15, really.

References

  • Official NAFL School Almanac, 2014
  • NAFL School Circulars 2014
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.