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Indian school children gather in front of The <strong>City</strong><br />

<strong>Montessori</strong> <strong>School</strong> in Lucknow on December 29, 2011.<br />

Indian school children gather in front of The <strong>City</strong> <strong>Montessori</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong> in Lucknow on December 29, 2011.<br />

Lucknow, India: The first day in class for any new pupil can be<br />

an overwhelming experience, so imagine arriving for lessons<br />

as one of 40,000 pupils on the roll-call of the world’s biggest<br />

school.<br />

The first day in class for any new pupil can be an<br />

overwhelming experience, so imagine arriving for lessons as<br />

one of 40,000 pupils on the roll-call of the world’s biggest<br />

school.<br />

The latest edition of Guinness World Records awards the title<br />

to the <strong>City</strong> <strong>Montessori</strong> <strong>School</strong> in the Indian city of Lucknow with<br />

39,437 registered pupils in the 2010-2011 academic year.<br />

The school says that enrolment numbers have already risen<br />

above 45,000, with 2,500 teachers, 3,700 computers, 1,000<br />

classrooms — and one of the hardest first eleven cricket teams<br />

to break into.<br />

CMS, as it is known, was opened by Jagdish Gandhi and his<br />

wife Bharti in 1959 with a loan of Rs300 (Dh20.38 at current<br />

rates) and just five pupils.<br />

Today it sprawls over 20 sites in Lucknow, the capital of Uttar<br />

Pradesh state, and is as famous for its exam results and<br />

international exchange programmes as for its scale.<br />

“The phenomenal growth of our school is a reflection of our efforts to please our parents with our service to their children,” said Gandhi, who is still<br />

involved in the school’s management at the age of 75.<br />

“Our students have exceptional academic results each year and outstanding global exposure. Getting this Guinness record is heartening but it’s not<br />

just about size,” he told AFP.<br />

The pupils, who are aged between three and 17, all wear uniform and each class has about 45 members, but the whole school never gathers for<br />

assembly as t<strong>here</strong> is now<strong>here</strong> big enough to hold them.<br />

CMS, which receives no government funding, charges Rs1,000 a month in fees for younger pupils, rising to 2,500 a month for seniors.<br />

“In such a large school, t<strong>here</strong> are many advantages, one being you get to make a lot of friends across the many sites that we have,” Ritika Ghosh,<br />

14, who has been at CMS for two years, told AFP.<br />

“But as the school is so huge it takes a lot of effort to get noticed. Otherwise you are just one of the thousands that study.<br />

“T<strong>here</strong> are certainly more challenges and competitions, which in the end prepares us for real life.”<br />

Fellow pupil Tanmay Tiwari, 16, credits the large size of the school for making him more outgoing.<br />

“I used to be very shy but the school has given me that confidence,” he told AFP. “Now I am in the college team, debating in national competitions.”<br />

The school’s size is matched only by its idealistic ambitions, with pupils taught a philosophy of universal peace and globalism under the motto “Jai<br />

Jagat” (Victory be to the World).<br />

With pupils under fierce pressure to get good exam results, sport is not always a top priority, but cricket coach Raju Singh Chauhan says selecting a<br />

team is still tricky.<br />

“To fish out sports talent in the 45,000-plus students can be a huge problem,” he said.<br />

“For this reason we hold inter-branch competitions to dig out the best children and then eventually we get the bigger picture and our best eleven for<br />

the team.”<br />

CMS first held the title of the world’s biggest school in 2005, when it had 29,212 pupils, beating the previous record holder, the Rizal High <strong>School</strong> in<br />

Manila, Philippines, which had 19,738 pupils.<br />

Alumni include Ushhan Gundevia, an executive banker at Goldman Sachs, and Prakash Gupta, a senior United Nations diplomat in New York, as<br />

well as Harvard scholars and several leading surgeons and scientists.<br />

“The school is an inspiration not only to the pupils, but also to anyone, anyw<strong>here</strong> who wants to make a positive difference,” Craig Glenday, editor-inchief<br />

of Guinness World Records, told AFP from London.<br />

“The school understands that teaching is the most sacred of professions, and from humble origins to being the largest and one of the most<br />

respected educational establishment in the world, it is a truly awe-inspiring story.”<br />

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