CM Revanth Reddy Inaugurates Kothakota Girls School, Pushes Education Push
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Telangana Chief Minister A. Revanth Reddy on Wednesday, 15 July 2026, inaugurated the new building of Kothakota Girls High School, reaffirming his government's commitment to strengthening public education infrastructure across the state. The Chief Minister, who also serves as Telangana Pradesh Congress Committee (TPCC) president, used the occasion to outline a broader agenda spanning school construction, ITI modernisation, and student support schemes.
Context
Posting in Telugu on X (formerly Twitter), Revanth Reddy wrote: 'తెలంగాణ భవిష్యత్తు తరగతి గదుల్లోనే ఉందనే నమ్మకంతో ప్రజా ప్రభుత్వం విద్యారంగానికి అత్యంత ప్రాధాన్యత ఇస్తోంది' — 'Believing that Telangana's future lies in classrooms, the people's government is giving highest priority to education.' He added that the progress of government schools would lay strong foundations for the state's future, and that students from government schools can reach the highest positions — citing himself as proof.
The inauguration of the Kothakota Girls High School new building is one in a series of school infrastructure projects the state government has undertaken. The Chief Minister's post was tagged with hashtags including #TelanganaRising2047, #EducationForAll, and #FutureReadyTelangana, situating the event within a long-term development vision for the state.
Policy Backdrop
The Congress-led Telangana government, which came to power in December 2023, made strengthening government schools and vocational training a central promise in its election manifesto. The current push builds on earlier school infrastructure initiatives, including the Mana Ooru Mana Badi programme launched in 2021, which focused on upgrading government school facilities.
A key element of the announcement is the plan to upgrade Industrial Training Institutes (ITIs) into Advanced Technology Centres, with a stated focus on equipping students with technology skills to access 'world-class opportunities.' Alongside this, the government announced the distribution of Young India Kits to students as an incentive programme covering both academic and extracurricular achievement. The Chief Minister also stated that the state government spends Rs. 1,08,000 per student per year.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries of these initiatives are students enrolled in Telangana government schools and trainees at state-run ITIs. For girls in particular, the new Kothakota Girls High School building represents improved access to quality infrastructure in what is likely a semi-urban or rural setting.
Broader social mobility is a recurring theme in the Chief Minister's messaging. Revanth Reddy, himself a product of government schools, stated directly: 'I am living proof that students who studied in government schools can also reach the highest positions.' He urged every student to 'dream big, study hard, and excel in sports as well.'
What's Next
Attention will now turn to the rollout schedule and geographic coverage of the Young India Kits distribution, as well as the timeline for converting additional ITIs into Advanced Technology Centres. Further school building inaugurations and vocational training upgrades announced under the 2026-27 state budget are expected to follow. The #TelanganaRising2047 framing signals that the government intends to present these education investments as part of a multi-decade state development roadmap leading up to the centenary of Indian independence.