6 Government School Teachers From Delhi Bag 'Fulbright Teaching Fellowship'

Six government school teachers in the city have got the 'Fulbright Teaching Fellowship'. The selected ones will join teachers of 40 different countries at Washington.

Education | Written by | Updated: January 22, 2018 13:17 IST
6 Government School Teachers From Delhi Bag 'Fulbright Teaching Fellowship'

Government School Teachers From Delhi Bag Fulbright Teaching Fellowship

New Delhi:  Six government school teachers in the city have got the 'Fulbright Teaching Fellowship'. The selected ones will join teachers of 40 different countries at Washington. Deputy Chief Minister of Delhi Manish Sisodia, who also holds the education portfolio, congratulated the selected teachers. Sponsored by the United States-India Educational Foundation (USIEF), this program takes teachers to the US for a semester. For international teachers, this professional development program is open to teachers from Bangladesh, Botswana, Brazil, Finland, Greece, Kenya, India, Indonesia, Israel, Mexico, Morocco, New Zealand, Philippines, Senegal, Singapore, Taiwan and Uganda.

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Teachers holding bachelor's degree with at least five years of full-time teaching experience are eligible to apply for this program. For the current year, online application process has begun for the program. The application process deadline is 1 March 2018 and the notification of finalists will be released in September.

Earlier this month at the 65th Central Advisory Board of Education (CABE) meeting, Manish Sisodia had suggested that the CBSE, NCERT and other state education bodies reduce the syllabus by 50 per cent. "The time has come when all the education ministers put their heads together to assure the country that they will bring the solution of terrorism through education. We will bring the solution of terrorism and global warming through education. Until now we have been using education as a tool to reduce poverty or provide employment and eradicate poverty and have found ourself successful to a large extent, but we have never used education as a tool to solve problems like terrorism," he added.