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Haryana's government girls school recognised among top 10 schools worldwide for supporting healthy lives
Haryana's government girls school recognised among top 10 schools worldwide for supporting healthy lives

Time of India

time11 hours ago

  • General
  • Time of India

Haryana's government girls school recognised among top 10 schools worldwide for supporting healthy lives

CHANDIGARH: Government Girls Senior Secondary School NIT-5, Faridabad, is among the four Indian schools that were on Wednesday named among the top 10 finalists across different categories for the annual World's Best School Prizes, organised in the UK to celebrate schools' enormous contribution to society's progress. Schools from Haryana, Maharashtra, Karnataka and Uttar Pradesh were unveiled as contenders for membership to the Best School to Work programme to help schools attract and retain the best teachers. The winners across categories will be announced in October. "This achievement is inspirational for the government schools of the state. This also proves that government schools can excel on the global platform," Haryana's Education Minister Mahipal Dhanda said on Thursday. Education Minister Dhanda said the success of the Faridabad school will propel other government schools in the state towards innovation and student welfare. With this, he said, the reform initiatives like smart classrooms, STEM labs (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics lab) and teachers' training by the state government will fresh impetus. The five World's Best School Prizes for Community Collaboration, Environmental Action, Innovation, Overcoming Adversity and Supporting Healthy Lives were founded by UK-headquartered T4 Education in the wake of COVID-19 to give a platform to schools that are changing lives in their classrooms and beyond. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Perdagangkan CFD Emas dengan Broker Tepercaya IC Markets Mendaftar Undo T4 Education calls itself a global platform, bringing together a community of over 2,00,000 teachers from more than 100 countries to transform education. The government school in Faridabad has been selected for transforming the lives of at-risk girls by interlinking nutritional programmes, physical well-being, and mental health support with education to break down societal barriers and ensure no girl is left behind. It is on the list of 10 finalists for the prize under the Supporting Healthy Lives category. The winners will be chosen by an expert Judging Academy, with all 50 finalist schools across five categories also taking part in a public vote opened this week to determine the winner of the Community Choice Award. The worldwide winners across these categories will be announced in October, with all the finalists and winners invited to the World Schools Summit in Abu Dhabi on November 15-16. The winning schools will share their best practices, unique expertise and experience with policymakers and leading figures in global education. Is your child ready for the careers of tomorrow? Enroll now and take advantage of our early bird offer! Spaces are limited.

Faridabad govt school among 4 Indian schools selected as finalists for World's Best School Prizes
Faridabad govt school among 4 Indian schools selected as finalists for World's Best School Prizes

Hindustan Times

time21 hours ago

  • General
  • Hindustan Times

Faridabad govt school among 4 Indian schools selected as finalists for World's Best School Prizes

Chandigarh, Government Girls Senior Secondary School NIT-5, Faridabad, is among the four Indian schools that were on Wednesday named among the top 10 finalists across different categories for the annual World's Best School Prizes, organised in the UK to celebrate schools' enormous contribution to society's progress. Schools from Haryana, Maharashtra, Karnataka and Uttar Pradesh were unveiled as contenders for membership to the Best School to Work programme to help schools attract and retain the best teachers. The winners across categories will be announced in October. "This achievement is inspirational for the government schools of the state. This also proves that government schools can excel on the global platform," Haryana's Education Minister Mahipal Dhanda said on Thursday. Education Minister Dhanda said the success of the Faridabad school will propel other government schools in the state towards innovation and student welfare. With this, he said, the reform initiatives like smart classrooms, STEM labs and teachers' training by the state government will fresh impetus. The five World's Best School Prizes for Community Collaboration, Environmental Action, Innovation, Overcoming Adversity and Supporting Healthy Lives were founded by UK-headquartered T4 Education in the wake of COVID-19 to give a platform to schools that are changing lives in their classrooms and beyond. T4 Education calls itself a global platform, bringing together a community of over 2,00,000 teachers from more than 100 countries to transform education. The government school in Faridabad has been selected for transforming the lives of at-risk girls by interlinking nutritional programmes, physical well-being, and mental health support with education to break down societal barriers and ensure no girl is left behind. It is on the list of 10 finalists for the prize under the Supporting Healthy Lives category. The winners will be chosen by an expert Judging Academy, with all 50 finalist schools across five categories also taking part in a public vote opened this week to determine the winner of the Community Choice Award. The worldwide winners across these categories will be announced in October, with all the finalists and winners invited to the World Schools Summit in Abu Dhabi on November 15-16. The winning schools will share their best practices, unique expertise and experience with policymakers and leading figures in global education.

New head of Hong Kong's Foreign Correspondents' Club Morgan Davis vows to hold the line
New head of Hong Kong's Foreign Correspondents' Club Morgan Davis vows to hold the line

HKFP

time12-06-2025

  • Business
  • HKFP

New head of Hong Kong's Foreign Correspondents' Club Morgan Davis vows to hold the line

The new head of Hong Kong's Foreign Correspondents' Club (FCC) has told HKFP the press club will 'stay the course' under her tenure by supporting journalists and seeking dialogue with governments. Morgan Davis, the Asia Bonds Editor at the UK-headquartered International Financing Review, stood as the sole candidate for president last month, replacing Lee Williamson of the South China Morning Post as chief following elections last month. 'We will continue the same process for issuing press freedom statements and I do not anticipate any changes to our approach this year,' she told HKFP on Thursday over email. 'I believe these are an important tool for us at the club to signal our support for journalists in the region, and we, of course, welcome an open dialogue with governments and regional leaders on these events and topics.' A Hong Kong resident of nine years, Davis was born in Illinois, US and studied journalism in New York. She served as an FCC board member for three years ahead of taking the helm, and also teaches international journalism to master's students at Hong Kong Baptist University. Meanwhile, Williamson posted a farewell messages across social media on Wednesday, saying that he was 'deeply grateful to every single member of both boards over the last two years for their support and counsel, which have been invaluable.' He said that the club had issued 21 press freedom statements over the past two years, with 14 relating to Hong Kong. The FCC Journalism Conference and Charity Committee returned under his leadership, whilst correspondent and journalist membership rose by 6.5 per cent since last year, he added. Gov't lease The club leases a venue from the government at the Old Dairy Farm Depot on Lower Albert Road in Central. After being renewed in 2022 for three years, with new national security clauses added, the agreement is set to expire at the end of this year. Davis told HKFP she was focused on ensuring the lease was renewed: 'I am confident the club has demonstrated its commitment to keeping its home as we invested HK$5.9m to maintain our heritage building. We have proven ourselves to be an integral part of the Hong Kong community through our charity work, our professional programs for journalists, and our club events, which support an open dialogue on relevant issues. ' In 2018, former Hong Kong leader Leung Chun-ying suggested that the lease could be cancelled after the club hosted a talk by a pro-independence activist. Press freedom concerns Hong Kong has plummeted in international press freedom indices since the onset of the 2020 and 2024 security laws. Watchdogs cite the arrest and jailing of journalists, raids on newsrooms and the closure of around 10 media outlets including Apple Daily, Stand News and Citizen News. Over 1,000 journalists have lost their jobs, whilst many have emigrated. Meanwhile, the city's government-funded broadcaster RTHK has adopted new editorial guidelines, purged its archives and axed news and satirical shows. In 2022, Chief Executive John Lee said press freedom was 'in the pocket' of Hongkongers but 'nobody is above the law.' Although he has told the press to ' tell a good Hong Kong story,' government departments have been reluctant to respond to story pitches.

London must ‘market its successes better' to avoid another Wise
London must ‘market its successes better' to avoid another Wise

Yahoo

time08-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

London must ‘market its successes better' to avoid another Wise

Britain must emulate the success of Nasdaq and get better at trumpeting its business success stories if it wants to attract more companies to list in London, one of the UK's top fintech venture capital investors has said. Speaking to City AM the day that payments darling Wise revealed plans to ditch its primary listing for New York, Anthemis founder Amy Nauiokas said the London Stock Exchange (LSE) should try emulate the support promotion the US's tech-heavy bourse gives its new constituents. 'It's not brain surgery,' said Nauiokas, whose firm has been an early-stage backer of fintech success stories like Etoro, Zoopla and Tide. 'They [the LSE] need to promise UK entrepreneurs that there's a path here, and that they'll support them, build an ecosystem around them, and give the perks that the Nasdaq gives them.' London capital markets have been locked in a multi-year struggle to attract and retain some of its brightest companies. Since the start of 2024 alone, cherished listed firms like Darktrace, TUI and most DS Smith have all delisted or been taken private from the capital's stock market. And promising UK-headquartered scale-ups like Arm have opted to list in New York over London, with other darlings like Revolut and Klarna looking likely to follow suit. Departed firms have tended to cite London's stubbornly low valuations and lower liquidity relative to its US rivals, but Nauiokas argued that the lengths to which New York goes to promote and celebrate its new additions was just as important a factor. Commenting on the Nasdaq's custom of advertising its fresh listings in New York's Time Square, she said: 'Half the reason why people go there is so they get to see their their picture on 45th Street.' Her comments ring true with the rationale for ditching London given by Wise, which floated in the UK to great fanfare in 2021. Billionaire cofounder Kristo Kaarmannder said a US listing would help raise Wise's profile in the country as it joins the many London-based fintech giants looking to expand their services in the world's largest market. 'We believe the addition of a primary US listing would help us accelerate our mission and bring substantial strategic and capital market benefits to Wise and our owners,' he said in the firm's statement announcing its planned departure. Nauiokas, whose firm invests in start-ups in both the US and UK with offices in both New York and London, said she understood the Wise board's decision, adding that were she a secondary capital and pre-IPO dealmaker, she 'would probably say the best option right now was either a dual listing or a US-based IPO'. But despite the downbeat rhetoric surrounding the London Stock Exchange, she added that the ongoing political turmoil in America was something on which London – and Europe as a whole – should be poised to capitalise. 'It strikes me that all the opportunity is here [in London],' she said. 'This is a moment. A moment for investors to find great entrepreneurs and make money, but also a moment for regulatory navel gazing – government navel gazing – private partnership navel gazing – to say we could do something here. Let's do something.' Family offices and institutional money are increasingly looking to reduce the weighting of US assets in their portfolio in response to the capricious and unpredictable policy directives from the White House, Nauiokas said. Many ultra-rich families have re-weighted their portfolios from an '80/20 North America to Europe to now 50/50'. 'I'm super excited about the UK specifically. But it needs to take this moment of market geopolitical dislocation,' she said, adding: 'The LSE can do a much better job of reshaping its proposition, and the government needs to get rid of stamp duty on shares.' Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

HSBC Business Banking Closure: HSBC to close its US business banking unit to simplify operations, ETHRWorld
HSBC Business Banking Closure: HSBC to close its US business banking unit to simplify operations, ETHRWorld

Time of India

time02-06-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

HSBC Business Banking Closure: HSBC to close its US business banking unit to simplify operations, ETHRWorld

Advt Join the community of 2M+ industry professionals Subscribe to our newsletter to get latest insights & analysis. Download ETHRWorld App Get Realtime updates Save your favourite articles Scan to download App By Jaiveer Shekhawat and Saeed AzharHSBC is exiting its business banking portfolio in the United States, as it continued to simplify operations and shift its focus to Asia and Middle East markets."Following a strategic review of our business, we have decided to exit our Business Banking portfolio in the United States," it said in a statement."We are supporting impacted clients while they transition to a suitable alternative provider and will retain some clients in our Mid-Market and Global Network Banking business," it Wall Street Journal reported on Friday that HSBC's move would affect about 4,500 UK-headquartered lender has been reducing its global footprint in an attempt to boost profits and expand in Asia and Middle East bank said in January it would wind down M&A and some equities businesses in the Americas and Wall Street Journal said HSBC laid off 40 employees in the U.S. business banking division. HSBC declined to comment, In 2021, the bank said it was withdrawing from U.S. mass market retail banking by selling some parts of the money-losing business and winding down sold its Canadian business to Royal Bank of Canada in 2022 for C$13.5 billion. (Reporting by Jaiveer Singh Shekhawat in Bengaluru and Saeed Azhar in New York; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

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