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How it works

The city machine: how one portal carries a whole town's schooling.

Each city portal is the same set of parts, tuned to that town — a daily pulse, a local school listing, an admission-season hub, a community circle, an events calendar, and a local editorial desk that holds it all to a standard.

The parts of a city portal

Six parts, one civic spine

Standardised across every city so the muscle-memory carries from town to town, then localised in language, schools and editor.

01
City pulse
The daily feed: localised board and exam-centre notices, school announcements fed by the schools themselves, scholarship deadlines, and weather-closure alerts. Short-form, Hindi first, with an audio read.
02
Local school listings
The town's schools, coachings and tutors by locality, with within-city comparison and clearly-labelled 'admissions open' notes. A geo-filtered slice of the wider eduZ directory — real entries only.
03
Admission-season hub
A seasonal mode that aggregates the city's date-sheets, per-board document checklists, the RTE city window, form-availability notes and a plain-language Q&A for the weeks that decide a school year.
04
City circles
Steward-moderated community rooms — guardians of a locality, a board-2027 exam-year board, a book-exchange and tutor-wanted classifieds — kept civil and on-topic by a real moderator.
05
Events & calendar
The town's education calendar: school annual days, demo sessions, counselling camps, workshops and city-league fixtures, with a reminder you can set so a date doesn't slip past.
06
Local editorial desk
A trained city editor who writes, checks and corrects. Schools send announcements; the desk verifies before publishing. Rumour is held; corrections are shown. This is the part that makes the rest trustworthy.
The editorial floor

Why a real editor sits at the centre

·
A city page becomes the gathering point on a board-result morning. That responsibility means a person, trained and accountable, decides what runs — not a feed that rewards whatever is loudest.
·
When a WhatsApp rumour outruns the facts, the desk holds and says it is checking, then publishes once it knows. Verified before viral isn't a slogan here; it's the daily rule.
·
When the desk gets something wrong, the correction is visible — not quietly edited away. A reader should be able to see that we own our mistakes.
Common questions

About how it runs

The parts are the same — pulse, listings, admissions, circles, events, editorial — so it's familiar from one city to the next. The content, language and editor are local to each town.

See it as a rollout, not a launch.

Each city opens when its editor and verified schools are ready — and the cities page says exactly where each one stands.

See the citiesFor schools