Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Where learning is the greatest lesson

- Read the full stories on www.hindustant­imes/education

As a teacher imparting lessons to his students in conflict-ridden Dantewada and Sukma, Chhattisga­rh, Ashish Shrivastav­a has learnt some big lessons in life.

“I learnt a lot from my students. They taught me that there is no such word as ‘teach’. The only word that exists in schools is ‘learn’ and all of us are learners sharing our wisdom and experience­s. That has been my key driver. I believe children can be co-creators of the content for learning and co-own their learning journey,” says Shrivastav­a, who has been working in two districts in the tribal and rural areas of Chhattisga­rh, the hotbed of left wing extremism.

Through his initiative Shiksharth, Shrivastav­a works with the local government and tribal community to improve the quality of education in schools with a belief system that communitie­s should take ownership of their own institutio­ns by contributi­ng actively in the learning of its children.

The greatest challenge is working in the Naxal-affected area and mobilising resources to effectivel­y and efficientl­y deliver. Accessing communitie­s which are hostile to outsiders, access to logistic and technical expertise are some other challenges. Because of the conflict arising due to left wing extremism, thousands of children were forced to drop out after schools in villages were destroyed in Naxal violence.

Talking about what moves him most, Shrivastav­a says, “We all had a childhood that was peaceful (in most of the cases), fun and full of life. Our work in Sukma has given many surprises but one surprise that has stayed with us has been the hope and zeal towards life that the tribals here have. They have been going through pain, misery and suffering, still they continue to live with a smile. Our team members did a painting exercise with their children. For the first time in school, the children were asked to draw whatever they wanted to draw with nothing to copy from the board. And interestin­gly, the students drew only two pictures: one of a village fair and other of a combat situation between police/ security forces and rebels. Close to 90% students had drawn the latter,” says Shrivastav­a.

This made him realise that he needed to work on the fear and pain hidden deep inside the little ones instead of just working on competency, learning levels and value systems.

“I have worked for over 11 years now with exposure and experience across technology, education, skill developmen­t and political activism in companies like Infosys and NIIT. I am an Acumen and Teach For India fellow. We work together in bringing the tribals, teachers and administra­tion on a common platform. We are bridging the gap in academic excellence arising out of language and non-contextual education in rural and tribal areas of India. The government­s are introducin­g ICT-based education which is also non-contextual for such students. We are working on designing efficient and effective solutions for the government and district education administra­tion to improve the quality of efforts being put in by them,” says Shrivastav­a.

While working on the technical aspects and developing learning methods for children, Shrivastav­a and his team have to first create a comfortabl­e trust-based environmen­t as the children they teach have to face conflict daily.

 ?? FACES OF CHILDREN HAVE NOT BEEN REVEALED AS THEY ARE IN CONFLICT AREAS ?? Top: Ashish Shrivastav­a with students at a workshop in Chhattisga­rh; (inset) a student’s drawing from a classroom exercise that shows a combat situation between security forces and rebels.
FACES OF CHILDREN HAVE NOT BEEN REVEALED AS THEY ARE IN CONFLICT AREAS Top: Ashish Shrivastav­a with students at a workshop in Chhattisga­rh; (inset) a student’s drawing from a classroom exercise that shows a combat situation between security forces and rebels.

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