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Extra-curricular activities are as important as school studies

Posted on 17 December 2010 by Dr.Chiranjib Deb

Extra curricular activities play a key role in developing skill of individual, it give enough space in child’s mind to think and act in different innovative way in different fields…

See knowledge is something that ought to be expressed, that should not remain bookish only….the extra curricular activities give a child to enhance the skill which he /she has learnt…now debate competition, speech ,extempore speech, playing different games, participating in quiz , dance, music all play synchronously with school study to develop all round outlook of a child…

Most importantly extra curricular activities enhance the confidence level, which is a very much needed, ….as self confidence is an important component of success…. also extra curricular activities make school studies enjoyable ,a sense of integrity develops in their mind,they start enjoying in groups.

School studies are  must, and extra curricular activities give an edge to succeed with an inherent knowledge…. extra curricular activities can not be a substitute for school activities….but both school studies and extra curricular activities are very much important….when both are combined, the children get into actual education…and it becomes effective ….

Dr.CHIRANJIB DEB.

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‘How to make education more fun for the child?’ (Winner)

Posted on 04 August 2010 by Sreevidya Nambiar

The Chinese proverb goes “I hear and I forget, I see and I remember, I do and I understand” .The process of learning starts right from the mothers womb. Abhimanyu learned to create chakraviewh from his mothers womb. Now, let us observe a baby learning to walk. When he falls, we say it’s o.k., try again. Do we award grades for his performance or fail him if he does not learn to walk by the time he turns one? So he tries again, enjoys doing it, it never tires him out, falling does not daunt him and he succeeds. Hurray!
A child is a natural learner, he follows his instincts, he asks many questions, does not answer any tests for what he has learnt till then. We are easy that he will learn his way. There are many pre-schools in our country which encourage the play way style of learning. But as baby hood gives way to childhood; by the time he moves into the first standard, he goes back to the conventional methods of learning. Teaching is all about covering the curriculum, assignments all about written tests! Slowly, the child plays it safe, stops asking questions and starts answering them- only the questions and answers are not his own. Schooling, to him means learning what he is asked to learn.
First of all,to make learning interesting in schools, we should be open to a lot of change. If a small variation is brought to the old style of cramming of facts, school becomes an interesting place. Teachers should be ready to let go off the authoritarian style of teaching to nurture natural learning in children. This does not happen as most of the teachers run out of answers.
The demonstration of a method helps a lot in teaching difficult subject like math to class of 30-40 students. For instance, in a lesson about circles, circular discs or used CDs can be distributed to the students and asked to measure the circumference. We can see them running around for strings, scales etc. Some will encircle discs with strings, some will roll it on the scale to find the measurement. It is obvious that this itself gives rise to different methods of obtaining measurements, relation between, circumference and length, and a better understanding of concept.
In the same way, the concept of X axis or the number line can be taught by a student being asked to walk in a straight line along the floor, counting his steps and marking them. The point where he starts is zero and from there, if he walks back we get the negative numbers.
This is moreover a game. Please don’t mention the noise it is going to create in the class. But there is cent per cent participation, complete involvement of the students. The noisy class learns better than a silent class.
History is often seen as a boring subject as students have to memorize the chronological order of events and cannot see a relevance of the happenings in the modern world. Students can be divided into groups and discussions and debates about a particular event and its outcomes, can be organized. Learning follows.
Plays can be scripted to make languages lessons interesting. Discussions on books read, encourage the want to read. Discussions about television programs and sports must be encouraged. We should also help them write daily news papers in every school. Now there is a perfect communion of history, daily happenings, language and ideas in one class. Perhaps if we could reduce the time for curriculum learning and assign more time for activities.
Science, of course is interesting if learnt through experiments. Lets go back to the one year old that learns the principles of physics by bending, breaking, throwing and mouthing his toys. Schools must acquire enough lab equipment for each and every child to try what he has learnt. More audio visuals will help him remember facts.
Natural sciences can be taught outside the class room, through field trips and so on. For example in a concept about herbs, they can be asked to bring any herb of their choice to the class and discuss about it. Here we find the children learning from their experiences and knowledge they bring to class. How many different ideas can we expect in a neatly printed text book?
The teachers often complain that there are many children who misbehave in class, are arrogant bullies and do not listen to the teacher. Some are seen to be too fidgety to sit through. Some do not see a point in taking down notes or finishing assignments. The parents are pressurized; students are terrorized into doing it. Both school and home turn out to be war zones for the child. The parents and teachers keep wondering. What we should understand is that it is the dull teaching approach that he is rebelling against. Given a chance to apply his intelligence and all the time and space, we can expect change.
These are all easier said than done. So many parents are considering a new concept of “Home Schooling” or “Unschooling” the child. We should think how palatable is this idea is for us as all of us are from the old formal school system. We may argue that the child will fail to socialize and the ‘counter argument’ is that the parents, grand parents are his teachers; the siblings, neighborhood children, the grocer, the milk man, the house-help all form his society. In our present system, learning takes place from 8.a.m. to 3.p.m. or 9.a.m. to 4.p.m.If a child loses interest in class, then it is a waste of time. Doesn’t learning take place before and after these timings? Child should learn from his personal experience and knowledge. This encourages flexibility in thinking and cultivates enthusiasm in the child.
“How can a bird that is born for joy; Sit in a cage and sing” sings William Blake in his famous poem about the school boy. So parents! Lets empathies with our birds of joy. Let us be courageous enough to bring about ‘change’ for a better tomorrow. Let’s learn from our mistakes as our one year old baby had learned to get up after his fall. Let us understand education in its true meaning.
Sreevidya Nambiar

The Chinese proverb goes “I hear and I forget, I see and I remember, I do and I understand” .The process of learning starts right from the mothers womb. Abhimanyu learned to create chakraviewh from his mothers womb. Now, let us observe a baby learning to walk. When he falls, we say it’s o.k., try again. Do we award grades for his performance or fail him if he does not learn to walk by the time he turns one? So he tries again, enjoys doing it, it never tires him out, falling does not daunt him and he succeeds. Hurray!

A child is a natural learner, he follows his instincts, he asks many questions, does not answer any tests for what he has learnt till then. We are easy that he will learn his way. There are many pre-schools in our country which encourage the play way style of learning. But as baby hood gives way to childhood; by the time he moves into the first standard, he goes back to the conventional methods of learning. Teaching is all about covering the curriculum, assignments all about written tests! Slowly, the child plays it safe, stops asking questions and starts answering them- only the questions and answers are not his own. Schooling, to him means learning what he is asked to learn.

First of all,to make learning interesting in schools, we should be open to a lot of change. If a small variation is brought to the old style of cramming of facts, school becomes an interesting place. Teachers should be ready to let go off the authoritarian style of teaching to nurture natural learning in children. This does not happen as most of the teachers run out of answers.

The demonstration of a method helps a lot in teaching difficult subject like math to class of 30-40 students. For instance, in a lesson about circles, circular discs or used CDs can be distributed to the students and asked to measure the circumference. We can see them running around for strings, scales etc. Some will encircle discs with strings, some will roll it on the scale to find the measurement. It is obvious that this itself gives rise to different methods of obtaining measurements, relation between, circumference and length, and a better understanding of concept.

In the same way, the concept of X axis or the number line can be taught by a student being asked to walk in a straight line along the floor, counting his steps and marking them. The point where he starts is zero and from there, if he walks back we get the negative numbers.

This is moreover a game. Please don’t mention the noise it is going to create in the class. But there is cent per cent participation, complete involvement of the students. The noisy class learns better than a silent class.

History is often seen as a boring subject as students have to memorize the chronological order of events and cannot see a relevance of the happenings in the modern world. Students can be divided into groups and discussions and debates about a particular event and its outcomes, can be organized. Learning follows.

Plays can be scripted to make languages lessons interesting. Discussions on books read, encourage the want to read. Discussions about television programs and sports must be encouraged. We should also help them write daily news papers in every school. Now there is a perfect communion of history, daily happenings, language and ideas in one class. Perhaps if we could reduce the time for curriculum learning and assign more time for activities.

Science, of course is interesting if learnt through experiments. Lets go back to the one year old that learns the principles of physics by bending, breaking, throwing and mouthing his toys. Schools must acquire enough lab equipment for each and every child to try what he has learnt. More audio visuals will help him remember facts.

Natural sciences can be taught outside the class room, through field trips and so on. For example in a concept about herbs, they can be asked to bring any herb of their choice to the class and discuss about it. Here we find the children learning from their experiences and knowledge they bring to class. How many different ideas can we expect in a neatly printed text book?

The teachers often complain that there are many children who misbehave in class, are arrogant bullies and do not listen to the teacher. Some are seen to be too fidgety to sit through. Some do not see a point in taking down notes or finishing assignments. The parents are pressurized; students are terrorized into doing it. Both school and home turn out to be war zones for the child. The parents and teachers keep wondering. What we should understand is that it is the dull teaching approach that he is rebelling against. Given a chance to apply his intelligence and all the time and space, we can expect change.

These are all easier said than done. So many parents are considering a new concept of “Home Schooling” or “Unschooling” the child. We should think how palatable is this idea is for us as all of us are from the old formal school system. We may argue that the child will fail to socialize and the ‘counter argument’ is that the parents, grand parents are his teachers; the siblings, neighborhood children, the grocer, the milk man, the house-help all form his society. In our present system, learning takes place from 8.a.m. to 3.p.m. or 9.a.m. to 4.p.m.If a child loses interest in class, then it is a waste of time. Doesn’t learning take place before and after these timings? Child should learn from his personal experience and knowledge. This encourages flexibility in thinking and cultivates enthusiasm in the child.

“How can a bird that is born for joy; Sit in a cage and sing” sings William Blake in his famous poem about the school boy. So parents! Lets empathies with our birds of joy. Let us be courageous enough to bring about ‘change’ for a better tomorrow. Let’s learn from our mistakes as our one year old baby had learned to get up after his fall. Let us understand education in its true meaning.

- Sreevidya Nambiar

Cj_Aviva 09901

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‘How to make education more fun for the child?’ (Runner-up)

Posted on 03 August 2010 by Soniya Punjabi

Education is the most important ingredient of a successful life. It makes a person knowledgeable and teaches him to behave decently in the society. It helps us creating our own dignity in the world.
To make education more fun for the child, practical knowledge should be given as far as possible. Teaching should be done with lots of innovative ideas in the simplest form. At times, it becomes monotonous for students to study in the class within four walls. Teachers should try to take them in open ground atleast once in a blue moon. First of all the topic should be doled out into various points which makes it easy to learn. If topics are correlated with interesting things, it enhances memory. Sometime actions and gestures also play a vital role in making things funny, thereby making them easier. These actions could be utilized mostly when poetry is taught. A child’s mind will surely be keen to check whether the teacher is acting well for the specific word or a sentence. This judgment will help him to learn things properly.
A subject always appear to be very difficult unless and until it is made funny. There are different methods through which a subject could be made facetious. Maths being the backbone of education should be given serious attention. It is utilized throughout the life. So extensive exercises should be given frequently as there is a saying, “Practice makes the man perfect”. In this particular scenario if Maths will become simple it will become fun to elucidate it. Grammar could be best solved by setting some examples. In this matter names of two best friends could be used in conjunctions etc. For punctuation an individual child should be given a sentence to be edited on the blackboard. This encourages a child not only to perform well but also follow the norms of the topic. Nouns, pronouns, adjectives, verbs, tenses also could be made funny by drawing few funny pictures or rather cartoons on the blackboard. Moreover children should be asked to make few illustrations which makes the topic entertaining. For nursery children alphabets and hindi varnmala could be made amusing through games like hop scotch etc. Literature could be made funny through pageantry. Same ways subjects like history, civics etc could be also best illustrated through theatrics. For geography clay modeling should be used as archetype. Science is a subject of demonstration. JIL capsule video presentation promises a lot of fun along with knowledge. Periodic table becomes easier and funnier if learnt in rhyming form.
Teachers should never demoralize the child as this humiliation can result in his failure. They should try to establish a healthy and friendly relationship with each and every child. Comparing is the worst habit in the field of education. It should not be used at any cost.
Instead of completing the syllabus quickly, teachers should try to go slow and steady as per the pace of an average child. This will not only abate the burden but also it will make the concepts clear. Last but not the least, teachers should be full of zeal and should always wear a smile on their face. It spreads positive energy amongst students. They should take care not to be shabbily dressed as these things are not too important for education, still these things should not be ignored.
Soniya Punjabi

Education is the most important ingredient of a successful life. It makes a person knowledgeable and teaches him to behave decently in the society. It helps us creating our own dignity in the world.

To make education more fun for the child, practical knowledge should be given as far as possible. Teaching should be done with lots of innovative ideas in the simplest form. At times, it becomes monotonous for students to study in the class within four walls. Teachers should try to take them in open ground atleast once in a blue moon. First of all the topic should be doled out into various points which makes it easy to learn. If topics are correlated with interesting things, it enhances memory. Sometime actions and gestures also play a vital role in making things funny, thereby making them easier. These actions could be utilized mostly when poetry is taught. A child’s mind will surely be keen to check whether the teacher is acting well for the specific word or a sentence. This judgment will help him to learn things properly.

A subject always appear to be very difficult unless and until it is made funny. There are different methods through which a subject could be made facetious. Maths being the backbone of education should be given serious attention. It is utilized throughout the life. So extensive exercises should be given frequently as there is a saying, “Practice makes the man perfect”. In this particular scenario if Maths will become simple it will become fun to elucidate it. Grammar could be best solved by setting some examples. In this matter names of two best friends could be used in conjunctions etc. For punctuation an individual child should be given a sentence to be edited on the blackboard. This encourages a child not only to perform well but also follow the norms of the topic. Nouns, pronouns, adjectives, verbs, tenses also could be made funny by drawing few funny pictures or rather cartoons on the blackboard. Moreover children should be asked to make few illustrations which makes the topic entertaining. For nursery children alphabets and hindi varnmala could be made amusing through games like hop scotch etc. Literature could be made funny through pageantry. Same ways subjects like history, civics etc could be also best illustrated through theatrics. For geography clay modeling should be used as archetype. Science is a subject of demonstration. JIL capsule video presentation promises a lot of fun along with knowledge. Periodic table becomes easier and funnier if learnt in rhyming form.

Teachers should never demoralize the child as this humiliation can result in his failure. They should try to establish a healthy and friendly relationship with each and every child. Comparing is the worst habit in the field of education. It should not be used at any cost.

Instead of completing the syllabus quickly, teachers should try to go slow and steady as per the pace of an average child. This will not only abate the burden but also it will make the concepts clear. Last but not the least, teachers should be full of zeal and should always wear a smile on their face. It spreads positive energy amongst students. They should take care not to be shabbily dressed as these things are not too important for education, still these things should not be ignored.

- Soniya Punjabi

Cj_Aviva 09901

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Fun at Summer Camps!

Posted on 25 May 2010 by Aviva

Summer holidays are the most awaited event in the year for children. And why not? It spells two whole months of holidays for them. Two whole months of fun and frolic and so much more! Some go off on long vacations to their native places while some take up hobby classes.

But the trend these days is that of joining a summer camp. What is a summer camp? Is it anything like a camp where one is made to do some social work or engage in rigorous exercises? Lots of work and no enjoyment? Fortunately no! Summer camps are full of fun and frolic. The sole purpose of such camps is to get the kids familiar with the life outside city and get closer to nature.

These camps are seven long days and include activities like safari trips, bird watching, fishing, wild life tracking, horse riding etc. other activities conducted at camps include theatre, drama, dance, personality development and if the kids are interested, then even classes on aero modelling is conducted. Although they have camp leaders and counsellors who supervisor the various activities at the camp, the kids are taught to take responsibility for themselves

Summer camps provide a refreshing change and give the children an opportunity to do something different in the vacations.

If you want to send your child for summer camps you have few good options and they are:

  1. Summer camp run by the Mountaineering & Adventure association of Rajasthan
  2. Patrika in Education in various fields.
  3. Bangalore Summer Camp (Enthukids)

So do you have any plans for a Summer Camp this year?

summer_camp_small

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Things to do this Summer…

Posted on 24 May 2010 by Aviva

Vacations are always considered to be a huge event in every child’s life! As soon as the summer season closes in, children begin to make plans of their own. A two-month long vacation would spell complete freedom for your child – freedom from the school workload, no more home works or compulsory readings! Kids are finally free to while away their time, play all day long and watch TV.

Surely, this sounds like a great idea. But there is a better option to this and that is getting your child enrolled in a vacation course or a hobby class. Why, you ask? Simply because they have so much free time and it can be put to best use when they are engaged into doing something fun, something that they like! And this is a great option because most of the parents today are working and children are left alone at home.

Fortunately for parents, there are many vacation courses or hobby classes’ options available today. And a parent can opt for anything their child enjoys. For example, a dance class where children not only learnt their favourite form of dancing but also meet other children and mix with everyone.

Theatre classes are a huge hit too. For kids who are introverts and not very socially friendly, theatres classes are the best option for they help these children to drop their inhibitions and come out of their shell. For little artists, there are painting and art classes galore. Children, who like reading, should be encouraged to join a local library.

Sports are another option. Many kids join the skating club or cricket camps or even tennis and badminton. This not only enhances their health and mind, but also lets them enjoy themselves.

Any hobby can be taken up as a course today. There are options for pottery, swimming, arts and crafts etc.

The season of mangoes is already here…hurry and get into some interesting class!

Hobby Classes

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Language: A medium, an end

Posted on 20 May 2010 by Ritika Bajaj

It was only late last year that I was first exposed to teaching and that too, in an informal set-up through an NGO called Vidya. This NGO works toward improving the English proficiency of students of the lesser privileged in regional medium schools in Delhi and Mumbai. The ultimate aim is to enable them to go out into the world as more confident and able individuals for higher studies or/and vocational jobs.

My own years of learning were a breeze. With a privileged educational background in an English-medium school, access to multiple learning aids and parents that spoke only English at home, the only thing I probably focused on was how to get a distinction. A Masters in English Literature propelled me to pursue a career in the media and a quick jump to the top position in a magazine meant interaction with industry czars and some of India’s sharpest minds; not to omit, lavish lifestyles and heightened consumerism seen through lifestyle brands.

Today, through Vidya, I have got a chance to see the other end of India’s spectrum. A population that is totally oblivious to the malls and glitz of advertised India. Here at Vidya, I encounter 13 and 14-year-old children who ask if the escalator has already come to our country; children who are in the 8th and 9th standards but still unable to frame a complete sentence with the verb in the correct slot; children who are not equipped enough to compete in their own class examinations let alone the board examinations. And while we can rant and rave about the system and quality of education, especially in municipal schools, the crux of the matter is that a large section of children in our country need to buck up big time in order to face a globalised world — a world which unfortunately (or fortunately, depending on how you look at it) liaises and conducts most of its activities in English. It wouldn’t even be incorrect to say (no matter what some political groups would like to propagate) that today, Education = English listening, speaking, reading and comprehension skills.

The main issues that constantly face most of us teachers and volunteers is how do we hasten the learning process, how do we make up for lost time and how do we maximize the few resources that we have. What all of us lean on heavily is the Internet. With multiple English language teaching sites and easy-to-use games and exercises, we sift and sieve and find all relevant material, adapt it to the local context and prepare their classes. A lot of Indian story sites also help with mythological tales and Indian characters that the children can relate to. Books from publishing houses like Pratham and the Amar Chitra Katha series are also easy reading. Use of DVDs and VCDs with English subtitles and Tata Sky’s Active English all work as good and interesting classroom teaching aids.

Currently, we are working at putting together our own syllabus and textbook for the children at Vidya, and while doing this we are facing a challenge that is manifold: How do we optimize their learning? How do we ensure that they have understood and still learned something? How do we strike a balance between what they know and what they really should know? How do make them more confident and comfortable with the English language? We look forward to all aids, teaching, voluntary, sponsorships but most of all we look forward to expertise.

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The Importance of Play, Fun & Learning (Part II)

Posted on 17 May 2010 by Aviva

“We worry about what a child will become tomorrow, yet we forget that he is someone today.” – Stacia Tauscher

Education in India is evolving drastically. In the times where Kindles are replacing books and new ways of learning are included in the core curriculum, expectations as well as aspirations our soaring high. New learning systems like abacus, field trips, visual and sound learning programs have taken a slow but a steady place in our Indian education system. Every parent wants their child to be identified as a genius or talented but sometimes in that process the parent forget that the child is just a child and is unaware about success and failure of the adult world. The child will know as the right time will come to prepare and face the real world. For now let him get grubby in the mud, have tens of hundreds of questions filled with curiosity, let him be mischievous, let him be carefree, let her play, let them be kids.

One of the ways where kids_playing1fun and learning can pooled together is films. There are children’s films which are not only entertaining and fun to watch but also imbibe a lot of core values to the kids which otherwise might sound to preachy. Animation films are fascinating and they let the children create their own flight of imagination.

“Should children only be consumers of information? Instead we want them to become disseminators telling anecdotes from their own point of view.”

What about the sudden advent of reality television for kids?  Parent ambitions and high hopes are being translated to their kids. While it’s a great platform for the tiny tots to grow and nurture their talent, nevertheless parents should keep in mind to take failure in the right spirit. We also have reality shows and mainstream cinema made for grown-ups. While we cannot really decide what is good or bad, it is just a matter of creating those synergies with educators in how to make the visual media more interesting, non-manipulating and educative for children. There are films and television shows that tickle children’s imagination, entertain them. Thus technology can be a boon for the young, impatient tiny tots jumping with high adrenaline, ambitions and energy.  Restricting them is not the solution, channelizing is.

If you have any thoughts on ‘Fun & Learning’ do write in to us at writeforus@educationisinsurance.com

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The Importance of Play, Fun & Learning (Part I)

Posted on 14 May 2010 by Aviva

In today’s dog eat dog world, fierce antagonism and constant endeavor to be at the ‘top’ often takes a toll on the kids. “All work and No play can make Jack a dull boy” holds true.  Gone are the care-free days when majority of a child’s time was spent at the local park, reading books, climbing trees, playing cricket, etc. Now-a-days the scenarios are starkly different. Kids can’t get enough of playstations & gizmos. Majority of time is being spent on social networking sites like Facebook and Orkut and lately the big daddy of sms communication- Twitter. While a balanced healthy mix wouldn’t harm your child but excess use can lead to addiction.

It is not uncommon to hear people blaring to stop ‘wasting’ time and get back to work. Many a times parents tell their kids to get back to studies and not spill their precious time playing all the time. While it is essential that there is some discipline rendered to children, but at the same time it is important not to ignore the importance of ‘Fun with Learning’ as it enhances the overall development of a child.

Let your child enjoy the beauty of being in the natural surrounding, playing not to win but for pure happiness and pleasure of the game itself. Create a sense of environment where learning and fun is at perfect harmony. For example solving math problems can be boring but not if you turn it into an interesting game! One of the most important forms of play is playing with ideas. Abstract thinking is play. When a child daydreams, he is playing. By enchanting metaphors, imaginings, and concepts from inside their own minds and /she is reorganizing, cataloging, and re-linking in new ways, children create. Children need more solitude. Children need less peripheral, electronic, and structured grown-up encouragement.

If you have any interesting story to share about Fun and Learning, do write to us at writeforus@educationisinsurance.com

Child Playing

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Learning through play

Posted on 13 May 2010 by Nikita Banerjee

I remember the time when my mom would be really upset with us when we played instead of studying. She, like many other mothers, thought playing only distracted us further and helped us while away time. But mothers cannot be right always right? One can’t blame them entirely. It is the society that has coloured our perception in this way.

Not until recently, young parents and old alike have started to realise to how important playing is. And today, there are games that help us enhance our knowledge and add to our learning experiences. And one of the best examples I can state is from the time I worked with an NGO called Children Toy Foundation.

Like its name, the founder of this organisation, Devendra Desai, is very fond of toys. Coming from an affluent family, he never had to ask for toys as his parents got them every now and then. It was his love for toys that prompted him to take up this initiative. Desai tied up with 26 BMC schools across Mumbai where his toy library and volunteers would work with the municipal children. Each of the 26 schools here had a special room dedicated to toys of all kinds. Each toy library consists of soft toys, games related to mathematics, science, geography and language etc.

Working with this organisation, I realised that the children studying in these schools who came from the lower strata of the society, enjoyed themselves thoroughly. They took care of each of the toys they played with. It helped to mingle with other children and work in a team. The toy library’s volunteers also acted as counsellors whom the children came to for issues of all sorts. Their attendance in school improved as they never wanted to miss a toy library period. The school teachers, who did not think much of this initiative initially, were very impressed.

In many ways, the Children Toy foundation gave the children a new perspective of education. It had the perfect blend of play and learning.

Education is very important but it cannot just be studying from book. It has to be a combination of books and games.

Children Toy Foundation

Children Toy Foundation

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