Sree Rama Varma High School

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Sree Rama Varma High School
Location
Kochi, Kerala
India
Information
School type Government owned, Boys.
Established 1845
Grades 1 - 12
Enrolment 2200
Website

Sree Rama Varma High School (Malayalam: ശ്രീ രാമവര്‍മ്മ ഹൈസ്കൂള്‍, officially Sree Rama Varma Govt Model Higher Secondary School, popularly known as SRV High School) is the largest government-owned school in Kochi, Kerala, India. It was founded by the Kochi Royal family as the English Elementary School in 1845.[1] The school was later renamed after King Rama Varma of the founding Kochi Royal family. After the independence of India from British rule, and the reorganization of the states of India in 1956, the school was handed over to the Government of Kerala, which now owns and runs it.

History

In 1845, when it was founded as the English Elementary School, it was located in what is now the campus of the Maharaja's College. It was renamed as Raja's School in 1865, and was upgraded to a college in 1875. In 1834, the school (up to secondary level) was separated from the college and was shifted to the present location renamed as Sree Rama Varma High School.

Organization

Even though the school caters for grades 1 to 12, the different sections have separate, even though adjoining, campuses as well as separate administration. Thus the school have separate campuses and Headmasters for Lower Primary (grades 1 to 4), Upper Primary (grades 5 to 7), High School (grades 8 to 10), and Higher Secondary (grades 11 and 12) sections.

Colonial architecture

The architecture of the school showcases the British colonial adaptation for Kerala. It is a two storied building built predominantly using lime and wood in an age prior to the advent of concrete and steel reinforcement. The floor is paved entirely with terracotta tiles, while the roofing entirely is with terracotta roofing tiles. Whole of the wood work of the structure is in teak wood.

Space Museum

Donated by ISRO (Indian Space Research Organization), during the term of the former chairman Dr. Krishnaswamy Kasturirangan (a former student of the school), the school has a Space Museum, which at the same time showcases ISRO's achievements in space research as well as educates the students in space science. The museum has miniature repicas of ISRO's satellites as well as satellite launch vehicles. The exhibits educates the students on various kinds of satellites and launch techniques namely Polar Satellites, Geosynchronous Satellites and related technologies and applications like remote sensing etc.

Noted alumni

  • Dr. Krishnaswami Kasturirangan, Member of the Planning Commission (India). Former Chairman, ISRO (Indian Space Research Organization).[1]
  • Changampuzha Krishna Pillai, Malayalam poet, known best for his romantic pastoral elegy Ramanan.[1]
  • Swami Chinmayananda, founder of Chinmaya Mission.[1]
  • N. S. Madhavan, writer.[2]
  • GN Ramachandran Iyer: (8 October 1922 – 7 April 2001) A prominent Indian scientist, best known for his work that led to his creation of the Ramachandran plot for understanding peptide structure. He was the first to propose a triple-helical model for the structure of collagen. He also made other major contributions in biology and physics and was nominated for Nobel Prize more than once.
  • AK Anthony:[citation needed] Former chief minister of Kerala and Cabinet Minister
  • KV Thomas: Former member of Parliament
  • V. Viswakumar: Surgeon. He also served under various medical administrative positions
  • VR Krishna Iyer:Former Supreme court justice, critic, independent supporter of leftist movements
  • Aashiq Abu: an Indian film director and producer best known for his work in Malayalam cinema
  • Amal Neerad CR:A noted film maker in India.(1990 Batch)

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 The Hindu, Thursday, 3 Jul 2003. Article titled: 'Raring to perform an encore'.
  2. Kayataran. 'N S Madhavan - Author of: When Big Trees Fall'.

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.