Education can change a child’s life.
But in India, access to quality education is still far from equal.
Millions of children are locked out of classrooms—not because they lack talent or ambition, but because opportunity never reaches them. According to the 2011 Census, 8.4 crore children between the ages of 5 and 17 are out of school. And for many, that absence shapes the rest of their lives.
This is where movements like Teach For India emerge—stepping into the gaps where systems fall short, and working to ensure that where a child is born does not determine how far they can go.
In Episode 2 of The Education Revolution, our special three-part series, we continue the conversation with Shaheen Mistri, Founder and CEO of Teach For India.
In the previous episode, we traced Shaheen’s personal journey. In this episode, we shift focus to what came next: the making of Teach For India.
We explore:
What “educational equity” truly means in a country as unequal as India
The moment Shaheen realised Teach For India could grow beyond a small initiative
The challenge of balancing scale with quality in education reform
Whether India is moving fast enough to bring every child into school
The role—and limits—of technology in addressing educational inequity
This is a conversation about building systems that serve children better, the courage required to think big, and the hard, often invisible work of sustaining change over time.
Credits
Host: Shreya M
Guest: Shaheen Mistri
Research: Alisha C
Artwork: Rajnikant S
Produced by: The Good Sight
Concept: The Good Sight
For feedback or to participate, write to us at contact@thegoodsight.org
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