“Working in the social sector today is considered a viable career option. It was previously a rich man’s hobby. It’s now a respectable choice,” he says.
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He credits Teach For India and organizations like it for raising the bar for social entrepreneurship and development programs.
Sathya completed his post graduation in 2007, in Development Management from the Tata Dhan Academy, Madurai - where business concepts are adapted and applied to non-profit administration for health, agriculture, education, sanitation and the like. He knew he wanted to work in rural agriculture and education, and the latter is where he’s committed to stay. Between 2007 and 2011, he supported a tribal farming producer organization in their microcredit and microfinance efforts; whenever they needed an investment - purchasing seeds or a cow, for example - Sathya’s team facilitated the collective bargaining process. Though most of his work was technical, including coaching farmers around new varieties of seeds or resource preparedness, he says the stint with the Dhan Foundation, “quenched my thirst for farming.” It was after four years that he turned to alternative education, having satisfied his curiosity for farming and agriculture.“I wanted to get a real-life, in-classroom teaching experience before becoming an educator. I felt it would be an advantage that I could be proud of throughout my lifetime,” he says.The Teach For India Fellowship had just turned two and its rigor and selectivity drew Sathya to apply: “I was amongst applicants from corporate backgrounds like IT & finance and here I was, an advocate for organic farming. I was so happy to be selected!” Sathya remembers the initial shock he felt when he first walked into a classroom, but mentions having a basic comfort level with lesson-planning and the classroom, instilled during Institute - an immersive 5-week training program.
“I also came with a lot of ideas, but I soon realized they wouldn’t work here. I sought novelty and had been researching and trying out new teaching methods. For my experiments, I changed the classroom arrangement every 10 days. I’m actually proud to say that I failed a lot more than I succeeded,” he says.
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“I expected the students to perform at a better level. There was a lot of rote learning. So, kids who were told they were at the lower order were actually at a higher order. They couldn’t succeed at rote learning, but were actually more intelligent,” he recalls. “No teacher shared food with the students or stood in front of them to sing and dance together. Everything is built onto that relationship. Academic growth will come, but it will be better with a valued relationship with the child.”These critical relationships enabled him to create lasting impact, especially among parents.
“The very fact that we showed different interactions between their child and a teacher figure led the parents to wait for me after class and talk about a range of topics. They began pushing their own expectations of their children. They used to stereotype their kids by asking questions like ‘why is he not getting marks?’ I asked them to appreciate that the child got better marks than last year, so let’s not pull him down!”Through parent teacher meetings, Sathya was able to introduce - what was a novel concept at the time - the growth mindset. But there were always some things beyond his control. He met Nisha, a girl whose brothers were placed in a better school when they reached 7th standard. Her parents wouldn’t send her there because she’s a girl. “We all know the statistics, but when you actually see this gender disparity happening to a child, it’s heartbreaking. She actually studies very well,” he says. Sathya never had a classroom theme or name, many Fellows create, but he did have a clear vision for his students.
“To me, the classroom is a microcosm of a living society. If I can give them an ideal microcosm as kids, they will grow to become citizens of the larger society and fight for the ideal society that was their classroom,” he says.“Some of the goals I had for my class seem a little childish now: getting them to the science olympiad, making 90% in math across the board and so on. Your expectations mature. Especially now, three years after the Fellowship - I set expectations on a different scale. Today, I want them to become change makers when they leave the class, irrespective of what standard they’re in.” The Fellowship gave Sathya an inside look at what’s plaguing the sector, and he knew he wanted to continue working to improve it. Almost 100% of our children are enrolled in school thanks to programs like the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, but what desperately needs to change now is their learning outcomes. He cites two problem areas in India that we should tackle right now: teacher training and pedagogy.
“A lot of our teachers went through an average education themselves. And people like you and I just don’t become teachers - let's put it bluntly. We need to look at the teaching profession in a very different way.”
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