Hyderabad: Starting January 2022, reception will be open to the first hybrid school in South Asia – JAIN International Residential School Hybrid (JIRS-H) – with a network of at least 40 campuses of houses in 20 cities in India, including Delhi, Mumbai, Pune, Visakhapatnam, Varanasi , and Hyderabad.
Established in collaboration with the school management company based in Hyderabad, Crimson, Cambridge’s affiliated school will break away from conventional format by bringing Board students and teachers from all over India – regardless of their geographical location – and offer online combination and oppose online combination and lessons Offline, for the first time, for K-12 students.
This is how it works: All subject classes will be channeled online for students through the learning operating system – TMRW – by teachers based in different places.
For offline activities, such as sports, practical, etc., students will be tied with schools close to their residence.
This will be called a home campus.
For example, if a student is based on Hyderabad, they will learn mathematics and physics online, but will go to school in the city to play football.
Annual Fee: Between Rs 1 Lakh and Rs 2 Lakh.
“There will also be a parent campus – Jain International Residential School, Bengalauru – but students have to travel there just to appear for their 10th grade and class exams,” said Francis Joseph, said the school board member, said.
“Through this model, we aim to unite quality teachers from all physical limits, so that every student is located in any part of the country, but the remote place is possible, can have access to good education,” Joseph said.
The school, which will have four branches in Hyderabad, will be officially inaugurated on December 24, by Amitabh Kant, CEO of Niti Aayog.
“We are really happy Jain International Residential School has joined Cambridge and is the first school in South Asia to offer Cambridge’s international programs and qualifications in a hybrid format,” said Mahesh Srivastava (South Asia) at Cambridge Assessment International Education, said.
Speaking for Crimson, Vishal Goel, who is also one of the founders of cerestra ventures, market leaders in the Indian K-12 segment, the word hybrid model is the way forward.
“It will allow schools to destroy their assets and allow them to lead long-term changes in how schools look – more sports infrastructure and experience space such as robotics and science laboratories,” he said.