"But how will we compete in the world if we cannot study," says Khursheed, a Class XII student who like several other children from Kashmir had no option but to shift to a Jammu school from the Valley, where educational institutions have been shut for 100 days now due to unrest.
Gulzar, who too has migrated to a school here, says she wants to follow the footsteps of Shah Faesal, the 2009-2010 topper of civil services examination from Kashmir.
Scores of students from Kashmir Valley have moved to Jammu and other places in the country to continue their education in view of unrest in the Kashmir Valley following the killing of Hizbul Mujahideen militant Burhan Wani in an encounter with security forces on July 8.
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"My friends also want to study. I am lucky that my parents were able to shift me to Jammu, but for my friends their parents don't have the financial means to shift them out of Kashmir so as to continue their studies," he said.
Gulzar and 30 other students from Kashmir Valley have taken regular admission at the Government Higher secondary School in Sunjawan area of Jammu where special classes are being held to make up for the time they have lost.
He said that he has regularly been getting phone calls from parents from Kashmir who want to shift their children to the school.
"Apart from the students who have taken regular admission, there are some students who come here to take classes. For such students we have exempted the morning assembly. They can come at their will to attend the class and leave whenever they want to," Singh said.
Khursheed rues that the future of the Kashmiri students was being put in jeopardy by the separatists.
"To succeed in life one has to compete and we cannot compete with the world with illiteracy," says Khursheed.
State Education Minister Naeem Akhtar said there were no
plans to defer the examinations.
"There is no plan to postpone 10th and 12th exams any further.
"I have been receiving countless calls from worried parents and children since yesterday after a baseless report was circulated by a news gathering agency and unfortunately picked up by many newspapers," Akhtar wrote on social networking site Facebook.
"All the students and parents who called me insisted that exams must go on in accordance with the published date sheet.
"That is the decision of the government as well.
"Let the students remain focused on studies and prepare vigorously for exams on the due date," he said.
Following the closure of schools in the Kashmir, several private schools in Jammu too have witnessed a huge rush of students who are migrating from the Valley.
The parents who have admitted their children in Jammu say that they don't want to compromise with the future of their children.
"Back home in Kashmir we have not told anybody that we are shifting our children to Jammu otherwise we will be targeted by protestors.
"We just want to give our children a bright future that is why we admitted them in Jammu," Khursheed's father said.