curriculums - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of curriculums in Hindi

  • पाठ्यक्रमों
  • कार्यक्रम

curriculums Definition

Noun

  • the subjects comprising a course of study in a school or college.

curriculums Example

  • Their curriculum comprised all the usual courses of instruction, except theology. ( उनके पाठ्यक्रम में धर्मशास्त्र को छोड़कर, शिक्षा के सभी सामान्य पाठ्यक्रम शामिल थे। )
  • They give an education similar to that offered in the lyces for boys with certain modificationsin a curriculum of five or six years. ( वे पांच या छह साल के पाठ्यक्रम में कुछ संशोधनों के साथ लड़कों के लिए लाइक्स में दी जाने वाली शिक्षा के समान शिक्षा देते हैं। )
  • He studied at the famous mining academy of Freiberg, in Saxony, and on completing his curriculum travelled in Germany and France. ( उन्होंने सैक्सोनी में फ़्रीबर्ग की प्रसिद्ध खनन अकादमी में अध्ययन किया, और अपना पाठ्यक्रम पूरा करने के बाद जर्मनी और फ्रांस की यात्रा की। )
  • The curriculum isn’t easy: many die. ( पाठ्यक्रम आसान नहीं है: कई मर जाते हैं। )

More Sentence

  • Handouts of the curriculum for each level.
  • Below is the McGuffey six book curriculum:.
  • A school curriculum, at that point, is nothing.
  • The curriculum of instruction embraces every department of learning and polite literature.
  • The science part of the curriculum is remarkably complete, and art is by no means neglected.
  • Daughters and sons must follow the same curriculum of study, thereby promoting unity of the sexes.
  • The curriculum of the Pendleton Academy was simple, like most others at that time.
  • Aesthetic forms had been attended to in the curriculum sufficiently to meet the demands of the day.
  • Remove this objection by improving the curriculum of feminine education, and there is hardly any other.
  • Every possible kind of curriculum which would simulate actual conditions of attack had been devised.
  • The effects of this curriculum upon the professors are deeper and farther-reaching than is usually perceived.
  • Somewhere in this curriculum is everything necessary to turn green college graduates into federal agents.
  • Exploring the curriculum, the work of the thirty schools from the viewpoint of curriculum consultants.
  • That submerged and isolated curriculum did not even join on to living interests where it might have done so.
  • This is probably the curriculum vitae point here.
  • This gave him more latitude with the curriculum.
  • Problems are simply part of the curriculum that.
  • They point toward a curriculum necessary to our.
  • He designed the curriculum and even the buildings.
  • The quality of teachers and curriculum was excellent.
  • During recent years chemistry has become one of the most important subjects in the curriculum of technical schools and universities, and at the present time no general educational institution is complete until it has its full equipment of laboratories and lecture theatres.
  • Thus the first two years of the arts curriculum in English and American universities correspond, roughly speaking, to the last two years spent in a secondary school of Germany or' France, and the continental " school-leaving examinations " correspond to the intermediate examinations of the newer English universities and to the pass examinations for the degree at Oxford and Cambridge (Mark Pattison, Suggestions on Academical Organization, 1868, p. 238, and Matthew Arnold, Higher Schools and Universities in Germany, 1892, p. 209).
  • As illustrating the rapid development of familiarity with foreign authors, a Japanese retrospect of the Meiji era notes that whereas Macaulays Esfays were ii the curriculum of the Imperial University in 1881-1882, they were studied, five or six years later, in secondary schools, and pupils of the latter were able to read with understanding the works of Goldsmith, Tennyson and Thackeray.
  • His early life was occupied in mastering the curriculum of theology, jurisprudence, mathematics, medicine and philosophy, under the approved teachers of the time.
  • The curriculum, originally modelled on that of England, is being gradually modified by the necessities of a new country.