Noble Public School, Sakhinetipalle

Noble Public School
Location
India Sakhinetipalli, East Godavari Dist., Andhra Pradesh, India
Information
Motto Wisdom Is Crown
Founded June 7, 1987
Founder B.R.V.Prasad
Headmistress B. Kasthuri Prasad
Faculty 30
Pupils 400
Colour(s) White and Maroon
Website

Noble Public School is an independent school in India, established in the state of Andhra Pradesh. Established in 1987,it was founded by Mr.B.R.V.Prasad and his wife Mrs.B.Kasthuri Prasad. Its first Headmaster was Ashok Solomon. The School is relatively small: it currently has nearly 400 students, graduating classes number about 20, and the total number of alumni who have graduated, since the School was founded, is estimated at nearly 2,000. There are 30 teachers in total. The School offers free education to the children of physically handicapped,poor and the needy.The goal of the school is to impart urban educational standards and facilities to rural masses and to instill in them a respect for the ideals of secularism, discipline and equality.

The school is owned by the Noble Educational Society.

Life at Noble

The academic year starts at the beginning of June, and the first Term (or semester), known as the Spring Term lasts four months to the end of Nov. The Autumn Term starts in December, and lasts till the end of April.

Extracurricular activities and sports are a generally compulsory part of school life for all students: cricket, hockey and football are seasonal sports.

Social work, known formally as "Socially Useful Productive Work", has also an integral part of school life.Over the years, generations of Nobles have helped teach underprivileged children in the area, and the School has worked with villagers in the construction of houses, community centers and school buildings; sanitation systems; energy efficiency systems; self-employment and AIDS awareness.

Alumini

Most of the Nobles are in and around Sakhinetipalli.The school has produced many engineers, doctors, agricultural graduates and many more graduates and post graduates from the down trodden communities.

External links