This man is crowdfunding to build digital classrooms in Indian villages
ThinkSharp Foundations' StudyMalls are
interactive libraries helping children from villages in India have fun while
they learn in a digitally empowered environment.
When little Shraddha was in class 7,
she wanted to become a pilot. She knew that they flew planes, but knew nothing
about becoming one. When Santosh Digambarrao Phad, founder of Think Sharp
Foundation opened a StudyMall in Surangali, an educationally backward region in
rural Maharashtra, she was exposed to a world where she could find answers to
her questions and chase her dreams. Today, she is moving in that direction.
Santosh
has been striving to make rural villages in Maharashtra digitally empowered in
education since 2011. An MBA graduate, Santosh hails from Mandwa in Beed
district of Maharashtra. He had been fortunate enough to acquire a decent
education and a job with a finance company. On a visit to his village, he was disheartened
to see that while the metro cities had moved beyond learning from books,
education in rural areas remained largely sub-standard. “While schools in metro
cities had become technologically advanced, schools in villages did not even
have a roof. There was increased absenteeism due to low interest in learning,”
he said.
He
conceived the idea that could bridge the gap between rural and urban learning
in schools. He devised a concept of StudyMalls in rural villages. It is an idea
of a library that provides better educational infrastructure in rural areas by
including an attractive sitting place during and after school with books,
educational games, toys, computer learning, digital/multimedia learning along
with workshops conducted by volunteers on various topics.
The
social entrepreneur also recounts the challenges he faced at the onset of this
social venture. Funding was one among them. “It took us two years to raise Rs
70,000 to start a centre in Surangali village in Jalna. It was difficult as
there were no crowdfunding platforms at the time,” he said.
Today,
he relies on a crowdfunding platform to raise funds for
his projects. “It is easier to reach people who wish to donate. I believe that
crowdfunding is a platform where people can believe in your ideas, even if they
don’t donate at least our work is reaching them,” he said.
His
first project took off in 2013 in a rented space in Surangali village. They
hired a computer-literate volunteer from the area to assist children in
interactive learning through digital means. Soon, the social entrepreneur
opened two more centres within school premises in Varangaon village in Jalgaon
and Vangani (W) village in Thane. These interactive study libraries have
impacted about 1,500 children in three villages. Most of them belong to farming
families.
“At
times there would be no electricity in the village. We have even installed
solar lamps in the centres so that they continue to play and learn,” he said.
Currently,
the social startup plans to raise money through crowdfunding to start a new
centre in Chikatgaon in Aurangabad. Santosh’s dream is to open StudyMalls in
all villages in India. For this, they are looking at contributions from the
corporate and Small and medium enterprises through CSR activities. In the next
five years, they plan to open 3-4 StudyMalls a year and create comprehensive
digital learning classrooms for the existing centres.
Source | Daily News Analysis | 30 April 2016
Regards
Pralhad
Jadhav
Senior
Librarian
Khaitan
& Co
Upcoming
Event | National Conference on Future Librarianship: Innovation for Excellence
(NCFL 2016) during April 22-23, 2016.
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