Pabna Cadet College | |
Seal Alt: | Logo of Pabna Cadet College |
Seal Size: | 150px |
Motto: | Perseverance Is Success |
Motto Translation: | বাংলা: সাধনায় সাফল্য |
Location: | Jalalpur, Pabna Sadar Upazila |
Coordinates: | 24.023°N 89.2939°W |
Postcode: | 6600 |
Free Text2: | Syed Salimullah |
Free Label2: | First Principal |
Former Name: | Pabna Residential Model College |
Free Text3: | 125670 |
Free Label3: | EIIN |
Principal: | Mrs. Sitara Amin (Acting) |
Head: | Major Arman Ibn Rashid |
Head Name: | Adjutant |
Colors: | sky blue |
Free Label1: | Demonym |
Free Text1: | PCCian |
Pabna Cadet College (Bengali: পাবনা ক্যাডেট কলেজ), is a residential military high school, partly financed by the Bangladesh Army, located at Jalalpur, east of Pabna town, Bangladesh.
Pabna Cadet College was one of six cadet colleges set up in a second wave (1979-1983) after the initial four were established between 1958 and 1964, during the Pakistan era.[1] It was created on 7 August 1981 by converting Pabna Residential Model College.[2] It started with 170 boys of the residential school in four classes.[3]
As of 2022, the cadet college boards 320 boys, between the ages of 12 and 18, in six classes from class VII to XII.[4]
The cadet college is located on on the north side of the Dhaka-Pabna highway at the village of Jalalpur in Pabna Sadar Upazila, about east of Pabna.
Within the campus are a three storey academic block, student housing, a dining hall and adjacent canteen, and Bir Sreshtha Nur Muhammad Hospital, named after Bir Sreshtho Lance Naik Nur Mohammad Sheikh.[5] [6]
The Bangladesh Army provides some of the funding for cadet colleges, administers them, and runs them on a military model.[7]
The school is headed by a principal, appointed by the Adjutant General's branch of the Bangladesh Army. Other key administrators are a vice principal, an adjutant (an army major), and a medical officer (a captain/major from the Army Medical Corps).
Cadet colleges were designed to be feeder schools for the officer academies of the armed forces, but nowadays they are no longer reserved for students planning to pursue a career in the military.[8]