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Bangladesh MHM School & College

Coordinates: 25°13′25″N 51°29′37″E / 25.22361°N 51.49361°E / 25.22361; 51.49361
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FOUNDATION AND ITS AIM

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Bangladesh Mashoor-ul-Haque Memorial High School and College, commonly known as Bangladesh M. H. M. School, is a non-government institution operated by the Bangladesh Embassy in Qatar.[1] It was established in 1979.

The institution follows the national curriculum of Bangladesh under the Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education (BISE) of Dhaka.

Bangladesh M.H.M. School & College
Location
Map
Abu Hamour, Doha, Qatar.


Qatar
Coordinates25°13′25″N 51°29′37″E / 25.22361°N 51.49361°E / 25.22361; 51.49361
Information
TypePrivate expatriate school
MottoKnowledge is power
Established1979
FounderBrigadier Mohammad Mashoor-ul-Haque
PresidentH.E MD Jashim Uddin
DirectorAnwar Khurshed
Staff180
GenderMales and females
Age3 to 18+
Enrollment3000
LanguageEnglish, Arabic
Houses4
Color(s)House colors:      Blue, maroon, green, yellow
PublicationThe Mirror

History

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It was established in 1979.[2]

In 2005, the chairperson of the BISE of Dhaka, Prof. Shaheda Obaed, stated that the managing committee setup is not legal under BISE rules and should be abolished. The BISE also stated that no teachers may be fired without BISE approval; there was controversy after the principal of MHM fired two popular teachers.[3]

The school was renovated in 2006.[4]

Transport

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This school does not uses its own transport for the comfort of its students and facilities. school maintains a fleet of school buses. As of 2020 the school had over 35 buses, Three of which were recently acquired.[2]

Student body

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As of 2020 the school had around 3000 to 4000 students. It serves the Bangladeshi expatriates in Qatar .[2]

References

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  1. ^ "Bangladesh Mashhoor Ul Haq Memorial". qatareducationaldirectory.qa. Retrieved 2022-10-10.
  2. ^ a b c "Bangladesh school adds two new buses to its fleet." Gulf Times. Friday 24 November 2006. Retrieved on June 2, 2016.
  3. ^ Mannan, Mohamed Abdul. "Bangladesh MHM school panel is deemed ‘illegal’ by Dhaka." Gulf Times. Thursday 26 May 2005. Retrieved on June 2, 2016.
  4. ^ Mannan, Mohamed Abdul. "Bangladesh school wears a new look." Gulf Times. Saturday 19 August 2006. Retrieved on June 2, 2016.
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