Nripendra Narayan Memorial High School, Tufanganj | |
Streetaddress: | Tufanganj Main Road, |
Region: | Tufanganj, |
Postalcode: | 736159 |
Established: | 26 March 1916 |
Headmaster: | Dr. Ramkrishna Pramanik |
Faculty: | 40 |
Students: | 2000 |
Publication: | Ushashi (School magazine) |
Nripendra Narayan Memorial High School (commonly known as NNM High School) is the oldest educational institution in Tufanganj subdivision. It is at the center of the town and is of historical importance regarding education in pre-independent India. The school was established in 1916 by Maharaja Jitendra Narayan, the Maharaja of Cooch Behar and is named after the late Maharaja Nripendra Narayan.[1] [2]
The school is a full-fledged higher secondary school with two streams (general and vocational) in its higher secondary section. It has been working to impart education and professional training for the students to develop human resources. Admission to the secondary section is for boys only. However, the higher secondary section admits both boys and girls. With more than 5000 students, it is one of the biggest schools in Coochbehar.
NNM High School showed a consistently high success rate in Secondary and Higher Secondary examinations, often reaching 100 percent.[3] In 2006, the school set an all-time record in the history of higher secondary examination.[4] [5]
NNM High School was established in 1916 by the Maharaja of Cooch Behar. Despite being in the most backward area of the State of Cooch Behar, the school used to get the highest amount of financial aid from the state.[6] The school got recognition to appear as a high school from the University of Calcutta in 1917. It was permanently recognized as a school competent to present candidates at Matriculation Examination of University of Calcutta in 1923.
In 1957, NNM High School came under the recommendation of the director of Public Instruction, West Bengal, as Higher Secondary Multipurpose School (XI) with Humanities Group and Science Group. The Higher Secondary Council granted recognition to Nripendra Narayan Memorial High School for imparting Higher Secondary Education (XI-XII) in general stream courses provisionally for two years with effect from 1 July 1976. Agriculture came as a subject in 1963. Vocational education stream (Agriculture) was introduced in 1978. This addition upholds the school as a dignified and unique institution in the district.
The school is in the heart of the town. The building comprises multiple wings that house the junior section, the senior section, the library, staff rooms, the gymnasium, laboratories, the hostel etc. There are two playgrounds and an agricultural farm.
The curriculum is based on the guidelines set by the West Bengal Board of Secondary Education and the West Bengal Council of Higher Secondary Education. The medium of instruction in the school is Bengali. At the Higher Secondary level, the school offers Science, Commerce, Arts and Vocational streams.
The students get training in parades, physical exercise, yoga as well as in games and sports. Football, cricket, volleyball, khoko etc. are generally played in different seasons. The Annual Athletic Meet and Prize Distribution Ceremony are regularly held in the premises in January. Students take part in inter-school tournaments, district school sports meets and state-level competition.
The school also provides NCC training facility to the students of class VII-XII.
Indian first class cricketer Shib Sankar Paul is an alumnus.
The school celebrates the auspicious Independence Day, the Republic Day, the birthday of Rabindranath Tagore and Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose, Saraswati Puja, Nabin Baran (freshers welcome), School Foundation Day etc.
Navy blue trouser, white shirt and black shoes for the boys and red-bordered white sari and red blouse for the girls every weekday except Thursday.
Two songs are chanted in the prayer, the first four stanza of উঠ গো ভারত-লক্ষ্মী[7] by Atulprasad Sen followed by the National Anthem of India. Although nominally independent, Koch Bihar was a vassal state of the British Raj (1774-1949). The patriotic song by Atulprasad Sen in school prayer, therefore, suggests its involvement in the Indian independence movement.