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Pune, the second largest city in Maharashtra, is one of the principal centres of school education in western India. The city hosts a wide range of institutions, from state-board Marathi-medium schools and aided English-medium schools to international schools following the IB and Cambridge frameworks. Its concentration of educational institutions, alongside its universities and colleges, has earned Pune the popular epithet "Oxford of the East".
| City | Pune, Maharashtra, India |
|---|---|
| Primary school boards | Maharashtra State Board (SSC), CBSE, CISCE (ICSE/ISC), IB, Cambridge (IGCSE) |
| Languages of instruction | Marathi, English, Hindi, Urdu (varies by school) |
| Regulatory bodies | Maharashtra State Council of Educational Research and Training (MSCERT); Directorate of Education, Government of Maharashtra; Pune Municipal Corporation Education Department |
| Notable historical school | The New English School, founded 1880 |
Modern school education in Pune developed in the 19th century alongside reformist and nationalist movements in the Bombay Presidency. Missionary schools, government English schools and indigenous Marathi pathshalas existed in parallel through the colonial period. The reformer Jyotirao Phule and his wife Savitribai Phule started one of the earliest schools for girls in the city in 1848, an event widely regarded as a milestone in the spread of female education in India.
In 1880, Vishnushastri Chiplunkar, Bal Gangadhar Tilak and Gopal Ganesh Agarkar founded The New English School, which became a model for nationalist-led private education. Its parent body, the Deccan Education Society, established in 1884, went on to manage several schools and colleges in the city.
Schools in Pune follow several recognised curricula:
The Pune Municipal Corporation and the Pimpri-Chinchwad Municipal Corporation operate civic schools, predominantly in Marathi and Urdu media. Aided private schools, run by trusts but receiving state grants, account for a large share of secondary enrolment.
Pune has seen a rapid expansion of unaided private schools, particularly since the 1990s, in suburbs such as Kothrud, Aundh, Baner, Wakad, Hadapsar, Magarpatta, Hinjawadi and Kharadi. International schools cluster around the IT corridors and the Mundhwa–Koregaon Park belt.
Owing to Pune's role as a major military station, the city hosts cantonment-based schools and the Army Public School network. Residential institutions in and around Pune include schools associated with major educational trusts and societies.
Pune's schools have historically produced figures prominent in Indian public life, journalism, scholarship, science and the freedom movement. The city's educational ecosystem, combining traditional Marathi-medium institutions with newer international schools, makes it a destination for students from across Maharashtra and other states. The presence of major universities, research institutes such as IUCAA and NCL, and a large defence establishment also shapes the secondary school landscape, particularly in science and competitive examination preparation.