Delhi Public School Rohini | |
Motto: | Service Before Self |
Motto Translation: | Concordia Discors |
Streetaddress: | Sector-24 Phase-III, Rohini |
City: | Rohini, |
State: | New Delhi |
Postcode: | 110085 |
Country: | India |
Type: | Public school |
Founder: | June Fernandes |
Gender: | Boys & Girls |
Principal: | Kanika Sachdeva Govi |
Average Class Size: | 38 |
Houses: | Brahmaputra, Yamuna, Sabarmati, Kaveri, Ganga, Narmada |
Students: | 2,562 |
Language: | English, Hindi, French, German, Japanese |
Delhi Public School Rohini (DPS Rohini) is a school located in Rohini, New Delhi, Delhi, India. The school was established on 3 July 1995 under the aegis of the Delhi Public School Society. The school began with 250 students in borrowed premises off DPS Mathura Road, with eight teachers and June Fernandes as the founder head mistress. The current principal is Kanika Sachdeva Govi. It has about 2500 students.
Every year, Delhi Public School Rohini has sent its outgoing pupils to several institutions of repute, ranging from IIT's, BITS Pilani, AIIMS (All India Institute of Medical Sciences), SRCC in India to Stanford University, Carnegie Mellon University, University of California, University of Illinois, University of Texas and Sarah Lawrence College, USA, University of Nottingham, UK and other institutions.
The school is rated 4.4 out of 5 as per Rating and Reviews available on SchoolMyKids.com.[1]
The school has a multimedia lab, canteen, two libraries, computer labs, physics, chemistry and biology labs. The school has installed Senses smart class, as well as a higher-order thinking skills lab called THOTS. Apart from all the usual sports like football, badminton, basketball etc. The school also conducts an annual NASA trip and several exchange programmes from countries like Germany and France. It has its own cabinet system in both senior and junior schools, a MUN society called 'DPSRMUN',[2] a computer club called 'XINO', a Maths club called "Vortex", a Quizzing club called 'Infinity', a Commerce Club called 'BIZECO' and a Newspaper club called 'Folio'.[3] [4]