Nashik (Maharashtra): A primary school located in a small village called Hiwali is running an unusually efficient curriculum that runs 365 days a year, 12 hours a day. Even the youngest of the students enrolled here are ambidextrous, can recite tables up to 1000, and answer logical, mathematical, and general knowledge questions in a fraction of a second. A lot of students enrolled every year here come out extraordinarily talented despite coming from uneducated and poor families.
The Hiwali primary school, located about 75 km away from Nashik, is a government school run by the district authorities -- but it is nothing like the mostly infamous rural schools in India. Apart from the official school syllabus that the state's education board has in place, this school also teaches its students basic survival skills. It employs plumbers, electricians, carpenters, and other such professionals to teach the students these skills. Praying, meditation, exercise, and sports hold an equally important place in the school's curriculum.
The students here are keen on going to school despite the school hours lasting almost the entire day from 8 am to 8 pm. The fixed routine here is never disrupted; starting from the morning prayers, followed by some social work, exercise, recitation, writing, and finally the lessons at school with breaks for meals twice. The students here are never weary of attending school.
The walls of the schools can be seen laden with beautiful Warli paintings -- a result of one of the many creativity-oriented initiatives conducted by the school. "We painted this wall some time ago after study hours. Some houses in the village were also painted," said a student.
"We go to school throughout the year. The school gives us two meals, so our parents have nothing to worry about. Our schedule here is fixed," he added, further stating that almost all of his schoolmates are ambitious with dreams of becoming doctors, IAS officers, and police officers in the future. "Sometimes, the elder students at the school teach the younger ones. We also have access to YouTube to learn things through online visuals," he added.