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Islam and science: The road to renewal

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Islam and science: The road to renewal

After centuries of stagnation science is making a comeback in the Islamic world
Jan 26th 2013

20130126_ird001_0.jpg


THE sleep has been long and deep. In 2005 Harvard University produced more scientific papers than 17 Arabic-speaking countries combined. The world’s 1.6 billion Muslims have produced only two Nobel laureates in chemistry and physics. Both moved to the West: the only living one, the chemist Ahmed Hassan Zewail, is at the California Institute of Technology. By contrast Jews, outnumbered 100 to one by Muslims, have won 79. The 57 countries in the Organisation of the Islamic Conference spend a puny 0.81% of GDP on research and development, about a third of the world average. America, which has the world’s biggest science budget, spends 2.9%; Israel lavishes 4.4%.

Many blame Islam’s "supposed" innate hostility to science. Some universities seem keener on prayer than study. Quaid-i-Azam University in Islamabad, for example, has three mosques on campus, with a fourth planned, but no bookshop. Rote learning rather than critical thinking is the hallmark of higher education in many countries. The Saudi government supports books for Islamic schools such as “The Unchallengeable Miracles of the Qur’an: The Facts That Can’t Be Denied By Science” suggesting an inherent conflict between belief and reason.

Many universities are timid about courses that touch even tangentially on politics or look at religion from a non-devotional standpoint. Pervez Hoodbhoy, a renowned Pakistani nuclear scientist, introduced a course on science and world affairs, including Islam’s relationship with science, at the Lahore University of Management Sciences, one of the country’s most progressive universities. Students were keen, but Mr Hoodbhoy’s contract was not renewed when it ran out in December; for no proper reason, he says. (The university insists that the decision had nothing to do with the course content.)

But look more closely and two things are clear. A Muslim scientific awakening is under way. And the roots of scientific backwardness lie not with religious leaders, but with secular rulers, who are as stingy with cash as they are lavish with controls over independent thought.

The long view

The caricature of Islam’s endemic backwardness is easily dispelled. Between the eighth and the 13th centuries, while Europe stumbled through the dark ages, science thrived in Muslim lands. The Abbasid caliphs showered money on learning. The 11th century “Canon of Medicine” by Avicenna (pictured, with modern equipment he would have relished) was a standard medical text in Europe for hundreds of years. In the ninth century Muhammad al-Khwarizmi laid down the principles of algebra, a word derived from the name of his book, “Kitab al-Jabr”. Al-Hasan Ibn al-Haytham transformed the study of light and optics. Abu Raihan al-Biruni, a Persian, calculated the earth’s circumference to within 1%. And Muslim scholars did much to preserve the intellectual heritage of ancient Greece; centuries later it helped spark Europe’s scientific revolution.

Not only were science and Islam compatible, but religion could even spur scientific innovation. Accurately calculating the beginning of Ramadan (determined by the sighting of the new moon) motivated astronomers. The Hadith (the sayings of Muhammad) exhort believers to seek knowledge, “even as far as China”.

These scholars’ achievements are increasingly celebrated. Tens of thousands flocked to “1001 Inventions”, a touring exhibition about the golden age of Islamic science, in the Qatari capital, Doha, in the autumn. More importantly, however, rulers are realising the economic value of scientific research and have started to splurge accordingly. Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, which opened in 2009, has a $20 billion endowment that even rich American universities would envy.

Foreigners are already on their way there. Jean Fréchet, who heads research, is a French chemist tipped to win a Nobel prize. The Saudi newcomer boasts research collaborations with the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and with Imperial College, London. The rulers of neighbouring Qatar are bumping up research spending from 0.8% to a planned 2.8% of GDP: depending on growth, that could reach $5 billion a year. Research spending in Turkey increased by over 10% each year between 2005 and 2010, by which year its cash outlays were twice Norway’s.

The tide of money is bearing a fleet of results. In the 2000 to 2009 period Turkey’s output of scientific papers rose from barely 5,000 to 22,000; with less cash, Iran’s went up 1,300, to nearly 15,000. Quantity does not imply quality, but the papers are getting better, too. Scientific journals, and not just the few based in the Islamic world, are citing these papers more frequently. A study in 2011 by Thomson Reuters, an information firm, shows that in the early 1990s other publishers cited scientific papers from Egypt, Iran, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey (the most prolific Muslim countries) four times less often than the global average. By 2009 it was only half as often. In the category of best-regarded mathematics papers, Iran now performs well above average, with 1.7% of its papers among the most-cited 1%, with Egypt and Saudi Arabia also doing well. Turkey scores highly on engineering.

Science and technology-related subjects, with their clear practical benefits, do best. Engineering dominates, with agricultural sciences not far behind. Medicine and chemistry are also popular. Value for money matters. Fazeel Mehmood Khan, who recently returned to Pakistan after doing a PhD in Germany on astrophysics and now works at the Government College University in Lahore, was told by his university’s vice-chancellor to stop chasing wild ideas (black holes, in his case) and do something useful.

Science is even crossing the region’s deepest divide. In 2000 SESAME, an international physics laboratory with the Middle East’s first particle accelerator, was set up in Jordan. It is modelled on CERN, Europe’s particle-physics laboratory, which was created to bring together scientists from wartime foes. At SESAME Israeli boffins work with colleagues from places such as Iran and the Palestinian territories.

By the book


Science of the kind practised at SESAME throws up few challenges to Muslim doctrine (and in many cases is so abstruse that religious censors would struggle to understand it). But biology—especially with an evolutionary angle—is different. Many Muslims are troubled by the notion that humans share a common ancestor with apes. Research published in 2008 by Salman Hameed of Hampshire College in Massachusetts, a Pakistani astronomer who now studies Muslim attitudes to science, found that fewer than 20% in Indonesia, Malaysia or Pakistan believed in Darwin’s theories. In Egypt it was just 8%.

Yasir Qadhi, an American chemical engineer turned cleric (who has studied in both the United States and Saudi Arabia), wrestled with this issue at a London conference on Islam and evolution this month. He had no objection to applying evolutionary theory to other lifeforms. But he insisted that Adam and Eve did not have parents and did not evolve from other species. Any alternative argument is “scripturally indefensible,” he said. Some, especially in the diaspora, conflate human evolution with atheism: rejecting it becomes a defining part of being a Muslim. (Some Christians take a similar approach to the Bible.)

Though such disbelief may be couched in religious terms, culture and politics play a bigger role, says Mr Hameed. Poor school education in many countries leaves minds open to misapprehension. A growing Islamic creationist movement is at work too. A controversial Turkish preacher who goes by the name of Harun Yahya is in the forefront. His website spews pamphlets and books decrying Darwin. Unlike his American counterparts, however, he concedes that the universe is billions of years old (not 6,000 years).

But the barrier is not insuperable. Plenty of Muslim biologists have managed to reconcile their faith and their work. Fatimah Jackson, a biological anthropologist who converted to Islam, quotes Theodosius Dobzhansky, one of the founders of genetics, saying that “nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution”. Science describes how things change; Islam, in a larger sense, explains why, she says.

Others take a similar line. “The Koran is not a science textbook,” says Rana Dajani, a Jordanian molecular biologist. “It provides people with guidelines as to how they should live their lives.” Interpretations of it, she argues, can evolve with new scientific discoveries. Koranic verses about the creation of man, for example, can now be read as providing support for evolution.

Other parts of the life sciences, often tricky for Christians, have proved unproblematic for Muslims. In America researchers wanting to use embryonic stem cells (which, as their name suggests, must be taken from human embryos, usually spares left over from fertility treatments) have had to battle pro-life Christian conservatives and a federal ban on funding for their field. But according to Islam, the soul does not enter the fetus until between 40 and 120 days after conception—so scientists at the Royan Institute in Iran are able to carry out stem-cell research without attracting censure.

But the kind of freedom that science demands is still rare in the Muslim world. With the rise of political Islam, including dogmatic Salafists who espouse a radical version of Islam, in such important countries as Egypt, some fear that it could be eroded further still. Others, however, remain hopeful. Muhammad Morsi, Egypt’s president, is a former professor of engineering at Zagazig University, near Cairo. He has a PhD in materials science from the University of Southern California (his dissertation was entitled “High-Temperature Electrical Conductivity and Defect Structure of Donor-Doped Al2O{-3}”). He has promised that his government will spend more on research.

Released from the restrictive control of the former regimes, scientists in Arab countries see a chance for progress. Scientists in Tunisia say they are already seeing promising reforms in the way university posts are filled. People are being elected, rather than appointed by the regime. The political storms shaking the Middle East could promote not only democracy, but revive scientific freethinking, too.

Islam and science: The road to renewal | The Economist

I, don't know if this was posted earlier. Must read.
@Mosamania
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Islam and science: The road to renewal

After centuries of stagnation science is making a comeback in the Islamic world
Jan 26th 2013

20130126_ird001_0.jpg


THE sleep has been long and deep. In 2005 Harvard University produced more scientific papers than 17 Arabic-speaking countries combined. The world’s 1.6 billion Muslims have produced only two Nobel laureates in chemistry and physics. Both moved to the West: the only living one, the chemist Ahmed Hassan Zewail, is at the California Institute of Technology. By contrast Jews, outnumbered 100 to one by Muslims, have won 79. The 57 countries in the Organisation of the Islamic Conference spend a puny 0.81% of GDP on research and development, about a third of the world average. America, which has the world’s biggest science budget, spends 2.9%; Israel lavishes 4.4%.

Many blame Islam’s "supposed" innate hostility to science. Some universities seem keener on prayer than study. Quaid-i-Azam University in Islamabad, for example, has three mosques on campus, with a fourth planned, but no bookshop. Rote learning rather than critical thinking is the hallmark of higher education in many countries. The Saudi government supports books for Islamic schools such as “The Unchallengeable Miracles of the Qur’an: The Facts That Can’t Be Denied By Science” suggesting an inherent conflict between belief and reason.

Many universities are timid about courses that touch even tangentially on politics or look at religion from a non-devotional standpoint. Pervez Hoodbhoy, a renowned Pakistani nuclear scientist, introduced a course on science and world affairs, including Islam’s relationship with science, at the Lahore University of Management Sciences, one of the country’s most progressive universities. Students were keen, but Mr Hoodbhoy’s contract was not renewed when it ran out in December; for no proper reason, he says. (The university insists that the decision had nothing to do with the course content.)

But look more closely and two things are clear. A Muslim scientific awakening is under way. And the roots of scientific backwardness lie not with religious leaders, but with secular rulers, who are as stingy with cash as they are lavish with controls over independent thought.

The long view

The caricature of Islam’s endemic backwardness is easily dispelled. Between the eighth and the 13th centuries, while Europe stumbled through the dark ages, science thrived in Muslim lands. The Abbasid caliphs showered money on learning. The 11th century “Canon of Medicine” by Avicenna (pictured, with modern equipment he would have relished) was a standard medical text in Europe for hundreds of years. In the ninth century Muhammad al-Khwarizmi laid down the principles of algebra, a word derived from the name of his book, “Kitab al-Jabr”. Al-Hasan Ibn al-Haytham transformed the study of light and optics. Abu Raihan al-Biruni, a Persian, calculated the earth’s circumference to within 1%. And Muslim scholars did much to preserve the intellectual heritage of ancient Greece; centuries later it helped spark Europe’s scientific revolution.

Not only were science and Islam compatible, but religion could even spur scientific innovation. Accurately calculating the beginning of Ramadan (determined by the sighting of the new moon) motivated astronomers. The Hadith (the sayings of Muhammad) exhort believers to seek knowledge, “even as far as China”.

These scholars’ achievements are increasingly celebrated. Tens of thousands flocked to “1001 Inventions”, a touring exhibition about the golden age of Islamic science, in the Qatari capital, Doha, in the autumn. More importantly, however, rulers are realising the economic value of scientific research and have started to splurge accordingly. Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, which opened in 2009, has a $20 billion endowment that even rich American universities would envy.

Foreigners are already on their way there. Jean Fréchet, who heads research, is a French chemist tipped to win a Nobel prize. The Saudi newcomer boasts research collaborations with the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and with Imperial College, London. The rulers of neighbouring Qatar are bumping up research spending from 0.8% to a planned 2.8% of GDP: depending on growth, that could reach $5 billion a year. Research spending in Turkey increased by over 10% each year between 2005 and 2010, by which year its cash outlays were twice Norway’s.

The tide of money is bearing a fleet of results. In the 2000 to 2009 period Turkey’s output of scientific papers rose from barely 5,000 to 22,000; with less cash, Iran’s went up 1,300, to nearly 15,000. Quantity does not imply quality, but the papers are getting better, too. Scientific journals, and not just the few based in the Islamic world, are citing these papers more frequently. A study in 2011 by Thomson Reuters, an information firm, shows that in the early 1990s other publishers cited scientific papers from Egypt, Iran, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey (the most prolific Muslim countries) four times less often than the global average. By 2009 it was only half as often. In the category of best-regarded mathematics papers, Iran now performs well above average, with 1.7% of its papers among the most-cited 1%, with Egypt and Saudi Arabia also doing well. Turkey scores highly on engineering.

Science and technology-related subjects, with their clear practical benefits, do best. Engineering dominates, with agricultural sciences not far behind. Medicine and chemistry are also popular. Value for money matters. Fazeel Mehmood Khan, who recently returned to Pakistan after doing a PhD in Germany on astrophysics and now works at the Government College University in Lahore, was told by his university’s vice-chancellor to stop chasing wild ideas (black holes, in his case) and do something useful.

Science is even crossing the region’s deepest divide. In 2000 SESAME, an international physics laboratory with the Middle East’s first particle accelerator, was set up in Jordan. It is modelled on CERN, Europe’s particle-physics laboratory, which was created to bring together scientists from wartime foes. At SESAME Israeli boffins work with colleagues from places such as Iran and the Palestinian territories.

By the book


Science of the kind practised at SESAME throws up few challenges to Muslim doctrine (and in many cases is so abstruse that religious censors would struggle to understand it). But biology—especially with an evolutionary angle—is different. Many Muslims are troubled by the notion that humans share a common ancestor with apes. Research published in 2008 by Salman Hameed of Hampshire College in Massachusetts, a Pakistani astronomer who now studies Muslim attitudes to science, found that fewer than 20% in Indonesia, Malaysia or Pakistan believed in Darwin’s theories. In Egypt it was just 8%.

Yasir Qadhi, an American chemical engineer turned cleric (who has studied in both the United States and Saudi Arabia), wrestled with this issue at a London conference on Islam and evolution this month. He had no objection to applying evolutionary theory to other lifeforms. But he insisted that Adam and Eve did not have parents and did not evolve from other species. Any alternative argument is “scripturally indefensible,” he said. Some, especially in the diaspora, conflate human evolution with atheism: rejecting it becomes a defining part of being a Muslim. (Some Christians take a similar approach to the Bible.)

Though such disbelief may be couched in religious terms, culture and politics play a bigger role, says Mr Hameed. Poor school education in many countries leaves minds open to misapprehension. A growing Islamic creationist movement is at work too. A controversial Turkish preacher who goes by the name of Harun Yahya is in the forefront. His website spews pamphlets and books decrying Darwin. Unlike his American counterparts, however, he concedes that the universe is billions of years old (not 6,000 years).

But the barrier is not insuperable. Plenty of Muslim biologists have managed to reconcile their faith and their work. Fatimah Jackson, a biological anthropologist who converted to Islam, quotes Theodosius Dobzhansky, one of the founders of genetics, saying that “nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution”. Science describes how things change; Islam, in a larger sense, explains why, she says.

Others take a similar line. “The Koran is not a science textbook,” says Rana Dajani, a Jordanian molecular biologist. “It provides people with guidelines as to how they should live their lives.” Interpretations of it, she argues, can evolve with new scientific discoveries. Koranic verses about the creation of man, for example, can now be read as providing support for evolution.

Other parts of the life sciences, often tricky for Christians, have proved unproblematic for Muslims. In America researchers wanting to use embryonic stem cells (which, as their name suggests, must be taken from human embryos, usually spares left over from fertility treatments) have had to battle pro-life Christian conservatives and a federal ban on funding for their field. But according to Islam, the soul does not enter the fetus until between 40 and 120 days after conception—so scientists at the Royan Institute in Iran are able to carry out stem-cell research without attracting censure.

But the kind of freedom that science demands is still rare in the Muslim world. With the rise of political Islam, including dogmatic Salafists who espouse a radical version of Islam, in such important countries as Egypt, some fear that it could be eroded further still. Others, however, remain hopeful. Muhammad Morsi, Egypt’s president, is a former professor of engineering at Zagazig University, near Cairo. He has a PhD in materials science from the University of Southern California (his dissertation was entitled “High-Temperature Electrical Conductivity and Defect Structure of Donor-Doped Al2O{-3}”). He has promised that his government will spend more on research.

Released from the restrictive control of the former regimes, scientists in Arab countries see a chance for progress. Scientists in Tunisia say they are already seeing promising reforms in the way university posts are filled. People are being elected, rather than appointed by the regime. The political storms shaking the Middle East could promote not only democracy, but revive scientific freethinking, too.

Islam and science: The road to renewal | The Economist

I, don't know if this was posted earlier. Must read.

Sir I have been talking about this for long those early Muslims who gave lot of new sciences to the world were hardcore fundamental Muslims which strictly followed Shariah and also made progressed in science and we can do it now their is no contradiction problem of secular guys is that their thoughts of modern society is limited to getting naked or drunk or having free sex and they are not focused on developing universities of sciences but on getting naked and having most vulgar fashion shows that is cause of the problem that is even great Iqbal said in his Persian poetry that west didn't made progress because of these things but they progressed because they developed research centers and progressed in science not by getting naked that thing have harmed them and harmed them a lot we can progress in science by keeping beards wearing Hijab because mostly we have to use mind
 
Good read

In the Islamic world, i think Iran and Turkey are the only ones who are moving ahead . We Pakistanis are far behind. The problem lies when our people work individually. As a matter of fact, most of our talent lies outside the country. We have the potential but we must learn how to become a nation
 
Only If we had produced the same amount of scientists instead of the amount of Jihadis [Bilsaif] we have produced in the last century, we already would have the spot our ancestors wanted us to have. Its an irony that it is far more likely for a Muslim boy to be sent to fight somewhere as useful idiot than ending up in a science or an engineering course.
 
Good read

In the Islamic world, i think Iran and Turkey are the only ones who are moving ahead . We Pakistanis are far behind. The problem lies when our people work individually. As a matter of fact, most of our talent lies outside the country. We have the potential but we must learn how to become a nation
We should see what Saudi have started they are developing Universities of Science with the help of Those geniuses who have runed the best universities in the world thousands of their own students are studying in different Universities of the world many have done PHDs and have returned and many will they will be trained in those newly established Universities by those Professors who have established University and than they will take over the University and run and in short time majority of the students in these Universities will be Saudis and they are also developing their different industries hope the keep working on this path
 
Only If we had produced the same amount of scientists instead of the amount of Jihadis [Bilsaif] we have produced in the last century, we already would have the spot our ancestors wanted us to have. Its an irony that it is far more likely for a Muslim boy to be sent to fight somewhere as useful idiot than ending up in a science or an engineering course.

You cannot blame this on the people.
This is 100% the fault of the failed military and cilvian leadership.
No where on earth or it's history have people been able to progress in science unless they had the backing of the government.
If we want to catch up, we need to get rid of the PPP and PMLN leeches and get a government that cares about progress.
 
Sir I have been talking about this for long those early Muslims who gave lot of new sciences to the world were hardcore fundamental Muslims which strictly followed Shariah and also made progressed in science and we can do it now their is no contradiction problem of secular guys is that their thoughts of modern society is limited to getting naked or drunk or having free sex and they are not focused on developing universities of sciences but on getting naked and having most vulgar fashion shows that is cause of the problem that is even great Iqbal said in his Persian poetry that west didn't made progress because of these things but they progressed because they developed research centers and progressed in science not by getting naked that thing have harmed them and harmed them a lot we can progress in science by keeping beards wearing Hijab because mostly we have to use mind

I, disagree with you on this. For science you need an open mind and free thought regardless of being a secular or a sharia following Muslim.

Malboos-e-haya.jpg


Kuch samajh main aya??
 
Only If we had produced the same amount of scientists instead of the amount of Jihadis [Bilsaif] we have produced in the last century, we already would have the spot our ancestors wanted us to have. Its an irony that it is far more likely for a Muslim boy to be sent to fight somewhere as useful idiot than ending up in a science or an engineering course.

Sir both are important what trouble was that what was the duty of our governments to do was given to people the duty of Jihad in case of foreign attack and as were being ruled by touts of kufr and they did nothing when Muslims were attacked people started doing it on their own that created trouble Sir what need to be done is Muslims getting together form Join Arm Forces and help each other in establishing Universities for sciences who have money they spend money and who have already got some knowledge they teach others that is how we can together make hell of progress and also establish Industries power sources and end corruption
 
We should see what Saudi have started they are developing Universities of Science with the help of Those geniuses who have runed the best universities in the world thousands of their own students are studying in different Universities of the world many have done PHDs and have returned and many will they will be trained in those newly established Universities by those Professors who have established University and than they will take over the University and run and in short time majority of the students in these Universities will be Saudis and they are also developing their different industries hope the keep working on this path

Kabee maan lo kay Iran bohot agay nikal giya hain. Here is what you should accept. They have resources like Saudi Arabia but they have not spent their time and money on women and cars. As for education please explain what Saudi Arabia has invented or contributed to the world ? My friend open your eyes. Saudi Arabia's unemplyment rate is 12%. Been born there i know more. The ones who are doing PHDs and returning are women, whom we all know have no future.
 
You cannot blame this on the people.
This is 100% the fault of the failed military and cilvian leadership.
No where on earth or it's history have people been able to progress in science unless they had the backing of the government.
If we want to catch up, we need to get rid of the PPP and PMLN leeches and get a government that cares about progress.

PML-N is just running a province. You can't expect them to change the whole country's education system can you ? BTW, compare talent provincially and you'll know who is contributing the most. In the last 15 years, blame must go on to Zardari and Musharraf's parties who are in federal government.
 
PML-N is just running a province. You can't expect them to change the whole country's education system can you ? BTW, compare talent provincially and you'll know who is contributing the most. In the last 15 years, blame must go on to Zardari and Musharraf's parties.

PMLN has has it's chance when it was with Zia, then in the 90s.
Nawaz has been in politics for 30 years, and most of that time in power in one way or another.
Also, PMLN HAS the ability to run education systems. Just look at the Danish schools.
They also control government owned schools in the provinces.
Who is stopping PMLN from making an amazing education system in Punjab?

The reason Pakistan is in the gutter when it comes to science is 100% due to Pee pee pee and PMLN and other parties that had power but only lined their pockets.
 
Kabee maan lo kay Iran bohot agay nikal giya hain. Here is what you should accept. They have resources like Saudi Arabia but they have not spent their time and money on women and cars. As for education please explain what Saudi Arabia has invented or contributed to the world ? My friend open your eyes. Saudi Arabia's unemplyment rate is 12%. Been born there i know more. The ones who are doing PHDs and returning are women, whom we all know have no future.
By the way in which thing Iran progressed man even Malaysia is better in science than Iran for GOD sake Iran :hitwall: by the way I am not asking to take science help from Saudi Arabia I am asking to copy the pattern they have started we are better in science than them if they help us is making Universities than can be through money we need to establish more Universities and research centers and yes the wastage of money that was correct point
 
PMLN has has it's chance when it was with Zia, then in the 90s.
Nawaz has been in politics for 30 years, and most of that time in power in one way or another.
Also, PMLN HAS the ability to run education systems. Just look at the Danish schools.
They also control government owned schools in the provinces.
Who is stopping PMLN from making an amazing education system in Punjab?

The reason Pakistan is in the gutter when it comes to science is 100% due to Pee pee pee and PMLN and other parties that had power but only lined their pockets.

Nawaz has always been incompetent and i still say that. However, 30 years ago was something else. Today's so called PML-Q, APML, MQM, AML, etc were all in PML-N. Today, this party is changed. The sensible ones who were once at the bottom are now at the top and now they literally put Nawaz under his toes. Another reason why the province of Punjab's law and order and economic activity is far far greater as compared to others. Just so you know Nawaz Sharif cannot become Prime Minister again. There is a new law that says that you can't be more than twice. Rest assured PML-N will this time prove to be a change in heart.

BTW here is a step forward.

Arfa_Software_Technology_Park_Lahore.jpg

ITU-at-Arfa-Technology-Park-Lahore-5.jpg

424071_489049534466991_143911501_n.jpg

74339_489049507800327_2000737563_n.jpg

work-hard-for-prosperity-shahbaz-advises-students-1329595221-6924.jpg

523204_493525944019350_715360007_n.jpg


:wave:
Schools Reform Roadmap Meeting-Enrolment Increases by 1 million

Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif earlier today chaired a meeting to review progress of the Schools Reform Roadmap program which aims at improving teacher/student attendance and provision of better facilities in public schools for which a strict system of supervision has been established. CM was pleased to note that student attendance has improved over the past year by 5% (increased from 87.1% to 92.1%), teacher presence over the past year increased by 4.6% from 86.5% to 92.1%. Facilities in public schools all over Punjab increased by 7.4% from 83.5% to 90.9% . It is also pertinent to mention here that Administration Visits increased by a staggering 28.3% from 67.9% to 96.2%.Executive District Officers (Education) are posted on merit and retained according to their performance and those who are found negligent in their duties are suspended and strict action is taken against them. The functioning of facilities depends on provision of funds and during 1st half of this financial year Rs.800.00 million have been provided and in the 3rd Quarter of this financial year Rs.2000.00 million are being provided. Overall progress has been excellent and teacher quality program has been expanded from 2 to 9 districts. Enrolment in schools has increased by almost one million in 2012. (admin)
 
Nawaz has always been incompetent and i still say that. However, 30 years ago was something else. Today's so called PML-Q, APML, MQM, APML, etc were all in PML-N. Today, this party is changed. The sensible ones who were once at the bottom are now at the top and now they literally put Nawaz under his toes. Another reason why the province of Punjab's law and order and economic activity is far far greater as compared to others. Just so you know Nawaz Sharif cannot become Prime Minister again. There is a new law that says that you can't be more than twice. Rest assured PML-N will this time prove to be a change in heart.

BTW here is a step forward.

Arfa_Software_Technology_Park_Lahore.jpg

ITU-at-Arfa-Technology-Park-Lahore-5.jpg

424071_489049534466991_143911501_n.jpg

74339_489049507800327_2000737563_n.jpg

work-hard-for-prosperity-shahbaz-advises-students-1329595221-6924.jpg

523204_493525944019350_715360007_n.jpg


:wave:

Sir most of these things haven't worked that tower is completely empty no new centers of research have been established and laptops funds for primary schools which he wasted on laptops
 
Kabee maan lo kay Iran bohot agay nikal giya hain. Here is what you should accept. They have resources like Saudi Arabia but they have not spent their time and money on women and cars. As for education please explain what Saudi Arabia has invented or contributed to the world ? My friend open your eyes. Saudi Arabia's unemplyment rate is 12%. Been born there i know more. The ones who are doing PHDs and returning are women, whom we all know have no future.

Feel free to believe whatever it is you wish to believe. Those who are blinded by pure hatred have lost their eyes, and there is no medicine in the world that can make them see again.
 

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