Telangana to Administer Anti-Drug Pledge to Students on June 12

Telangana will administer a mass anti-drug pledge to school students on June 12, following a suggestion from Governor Shiv Pratap Shukla. Chief Minister A. Revanth Reddy invited the Governor to attend the event, where kits containing uniforms and textbooks will also be distributed. The government is introducing a new education policy and a breakfast scheme to address student dropout rates and hunger. CM Revanth Reddy emphasized strengthening government schools to compete with private institutions and increasing the education budget to 15%.

Key Points: Telangana Anti-Drug Pledge for Students on June 12

  • Students to take anti-drug pledge on June 12
  • Kits with uniforms, textbooks, school bags to be distributed
  • Breakfast scheme introduced as pilot project
  • Government aims to increase education budget to 15%
3 min read

Telangana to administer anti-drug pledge to students

Telangana to administer anti-drug pledge to students on June 12. CM Revanth Reddy invites Governor Shiv Pratap Shukla. Kits with uniforms, textbooks to be distributed.

"The policy should serve as a role model for the country. - CM A. Revanth Reddy"

Hyderabad, May 11

School students across Telangana will be administered a collective pledge to stay away from tobacco, alcohol, and narcotic substances.

Chief Minister A. Revanth Reddy on Monday night met Governor Shiv Pratap Shukla at Lok Bhavan to invite him to attend the students' gathering to be organised on June 12 on the occasion of the reopening of schools.

During the programme, the government will administer a mass pledge to students, urging them to stay away from tobacco, alcohol, and narcotic substances, and to conduct themselves as responsible citizens.

Earlier, Governor Shiv Pratap Shukla had suggested to Chief Minister Revanth Reddy that students should be made to take an anti-drug pledge.

In line with the Governor's suggestion, the state government is organising a massive student gathering to administer the anti-drug pledge.

CM Revanth Reddy also informed the Governor that kits containing uniforms, textbooks, notebooks, school bags, sportswear, and other essential supplies would be distributed to students on the same day.

The Chief Minister apprised the Governor that school and college managements would issue directives to ensure constant vigilance to prevent students from falling prey to drugs and other addictions.

The mass pledge ceremony and other related activities are being organised jointly under the aegis of the Department of School Education, the Police Department, and the anti-drugs force EAGLE.

The initiative emphasises the collective responsibility of students, teachers, parents, and management in ensuring that educational institutions remain safe and drug-free environments.

Earlier, the Chief Minister participated in the inaugural programme of Education Week under 'Praja Palana-Pragathi Pranalika', the 99-day action plan focusing on accelerated governance, welfare delivery, and development initiatives.

The Chief Minister went around the stalls set up as part of the programme at L.B. Stadium.

He laid the foundation stone for Young India Integrated Schools to be constructed at a cost of Rs 1,011 crore in the CURE area.

CM Revanth Reddy also distributed cash prizes to government teachers for their meritorious services and students for their educational excellence.

The Chief Minister, who also holds the education portfolio, unveiled his mission to strengthen the education sector by introducing a new education policy and several initiatives, including increasing the education budget each year, introducing nursery to Class 12 in government schools, and providing breakfast for students in all government educational institutions.

The Chief Minister said that the government allocated 8 per cent of the state budget for education.

The allocation would increase each year and reach 15 per cent of the total outlay in the coming years.

He stressed that government schools should be strengthened to enable them to compete with private institutions.

He noted that 19 lakh poor students were studying in 27,000 government schools, while the total number of students in 12,000 private schools is 38 lakh.

Stating that the government would introduce a new education policy soon, CM Revanth Reddy said the policy should serve as a role model for the country.

The government is introducing nursery to Class 12 in government schools in view of the increasing number of dropouts after Class 10.

Taking serious note of the fact that students from underprivileged backgrounds are attending school on empty stomachs, the Chief Minister said that nutritious food, including milk and Ragi Java (finger millet porridge), would be served to school students.

As a pilot project, the breakfast scheme had already been introduced in schools in the Kodangal Assembly constituency.

The Chief Minister took strong exception to the opposition's criticism that there was no full-time minister for education.

He said he deliberately retained the education portfolio to provide quality education to students and groom them as responsible citizens of the country.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

V
Vikram M
Finally some positive news from Telangana! The breakfast scheme and kit distribution are much needed for poor students. But 8% education budget is too less - hope Revanth ji keeps his promise to increase it to 15%. Government schools need serious improvement to compete with private ones.
A
Arjun K
Anti-drug pledge is good, but what about the ground reality? In many rural areas, tobacco and alcohol are easily available near schools. The police need to crack down on illegal vendors, not just make students take pledges. Also, why is the Governor suggesting this? Is education becoming a political football?
R
Rohit P
This is exactly what we need! As a parent, I'm worried about drug abuse among youngsters. The EAGLE force involvement is a good step. But I hope the government doesn't stop here - need more sports facilities and extracurricular activities to keep students engaged positively. 📚🏏
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Nisha Z
I appreciate the effort but feel this is just a symbolic gesture. Real change requires addressing root causes - poverty, lack of opportunities, peer pressure. The breakfast scheme is excellent though! Hope they extend it to all districts soon. Also, what about proper mental health support for students?
S
Siddharth J
Good move by CM Revanth Reddy! But opposition is right to question - why no full-time education minister? Handling both CM duties and education portfolio might spread him thin. However, the nursery to Class 12 plan in government schools is brilliant - will reduce dropouts significantly.
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