Members organise fundraisers to help old age homes, orphanages, underprivileged children and families, women in distress, and others.
Tunbridge High School was opened by the Bangalore YWCA on its own premises in 1966, as a means of providing community welfare and addressing the educational needs of all children irrespective of caste, creed, community, or economic, social or physical handicaps.
Tunbridge is a "no donation" unaided Anglo-Indian minority school affiliated to the Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations (CISCE), New Delhi.
Highlights:
● The first school in Bangalore, Karnataka to provide integrated education, where children with disabilities study in regular classrooms.
● Declared as a model school for integrated education in Karnataka by the National Association for the Blind (NAB), of which the Governor of Karnataka is the patron. The Governor has presented several awards to the school for this work.
● The first school in the country to present a candidate with 100% visual disability for the ICSE examination in 1995, as a result of which children with disabilities from all over the country can now appear for the ICSE examination.
Tunbridge High School was opened by the Bangalore YWCA on its own premises in 1966, as a means of providing community welfare and addressing the educational needs of all children irrespective of caste, creed, community, or economic, social or physical handicaps.
Tunbridge is a "no donation" unaided Anglo-Indian minority school affiliated to the Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations (CISCE), New Delhi.
Highlights:
● The first school in Bangalore, Karnataka to provide integrated education, where children with disabilities study in regular classrooms.
● Declared as a model school for integrated education in Karnataka by the National Association for the Blind (NAB), of which the Governor of Karnataka is the patron. The Governor has presented several awards to the school for this work.
● The first school in the country to present a candidate with 100% visual disability for the ICSE examination in 1995, as a result of which children with disabilities from all over the country can now appear for the ICSE examination.