CM Revanth Reddy Inaugurates Girls' School in Wanaparthy
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Chief Minister's Office of Telangana announced on Wednesday, 15 July 2026 that Chief Minister Revanth Reddy inaugurated a new building for a girls' high school at Kothakota in Wanaparthy district, calling on government school students to become the architects of a rebuilt Telangana. The CM addressed students directly, urging them to harness every opportunity the state's public school system offers.
Context
Speaking at the inauguration, CM Revanth Reddy invoked a pointed rallying call: 'పలుగు, పార పట్టిన చేతులే.. కలాలు పట్టి తెలంగాణ రాత మార్చాలి' — 'The very hands that once held pickaxes and spades must now hold pens and rewrite Telangana's destiny.' The remark was directed at students from agrarian and working-class families who form the bulk of government school enrolments. He told students that education alone determines the future, builds self-respect in society, and brings joy to parents.
Ministers @OffDSB, @jupallyk_rao, and @Vakiti_srihari, along with Planning Board Vice-Chairman @Chinnareddy_G and elected representatives from the district, attended the event. The CM spent time interacting with girl students on the school premises before delivering his address.
Policy Backdrop
The CM announced that the state government will distribute Telangana Education Kits — comprising nine items each — to government school students by 15 August 2026. He said the education department is setting up a WhatsApp-based feedback system so students can report whether the kits they receive are satisfactory. The government has also been implementing GO 317, which addressed teacher promotions pending for 16 years and transfers that had not occurred for 10 years, with the stated aim of stabilising the teaching workforce and reuniting families separated by postings.
Revanth Reddy cited Telangana's improvement in the central government's Performance Grading Index (PGI), moving from 36th place to 18th place, but cautioned that the state must aim for the top two positions. He announced that 50 teachers have already been sent abroad to study best-performing education systems globally, and that 150 more teachers will be sent the following year. He also said the state government spends Rs 1.08 lakh per student per year and expects commensurate academic performance in return.
Stakeholders and Impact
The government's focus on public schools is aimed directly at students from historically agrarian and marginalised communities in districts such as Wanaparthy. Revanth Reddy said he has taken a personal oath to make government schools comparable to corporate private schools, acknowledging that enrolment in public institutions has fallen due to inadequate infrastructure over the years. He added that students who excel academically should aspire to become doctors, lawyers, engineers, and scientists, while those with sporting talent will receive full government support.
On the question of future employment, the CM flagged the risk that the AI revolution poses to white-collar jobs and said the government is preparing students for blue-collar employment through skill development. He specifically called for teaching students languages such as German and Japanese to open up international work opportunities.
What's Next
The most immediate milestone is the 15 August 2026 deadline for distributing education kits to government school students across the state, with the WhatsApp feedback loop intended to monitor quality in near real time. The state is also targeting teacher awards on Telangana Formation Day for outstanding performers. The next batch of overseas teacher training — 150 educators — is planned for the following academic year, with the long-term goal of lifting Telangana's PGI ranking to the national top two. The Kothakota inauguration is part of a wider infrastructure push for rural government schools that the current administration has tied to its broader human capital agenda for the state.