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  • Education

  • Fostering Peace, Starting with Youth

    Susheela Bhan has saved hundreds of young lives. 

    Fueled by a passion to restore humanity and faith in her war-torn homeland of Kashmir, Bhan established the Institute of Peace Research and Action (IPRA). The IPRA implements a comprehensive curriculum that inculcates democracy, secularism, social justice, and human rights into the hearts and minds of Kashmiri youth. The program is active in more than 200 schools in six districts, and has helped keep kids off the battlefield since 1999.

  • Jungle School Vacation

    It is one thing for an eco-lodge in the Amazon to offer hot showers and clean beds to world travelers without damaging the land. It is even better to send those travelers home with knowledge about the riches of the forest and a passion for protecting it.

  • Education reform

  • Gloria D’Souza on how to grow into a "fruitful" entrepreneur

    One of the first three Ashoka Fellows, Gloria de Souza turned down lucrative business career opportunities to teach. She found an educational system that deadened student’s creativity, motivation to learn, problem-solving capacity, and faith in India. Gloria created and introduced modern experiential education that challenged students to think and to solve problems together instead of chanting facts. Her core contribution has not been to invent modern education but to adapt it to make it attractive to everyone in non-Western settings. Her patient work of adoption, persuasion, training, and organizing spread her impact widely. Eventually the government of India introduced her work into other districts, and UNICEF asked her to help first in Sikkim and then beyond. Other areas of India, in Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and the Middle East want Gloria to extend her program to their areas.

    Who are your favourite changemakers from history?
    Tarabai Moda is one of my favorites. She gave me my best lessons in an environmental approach that makes sensory awareness the key to learning by observation, enquiry, and discovery—indeed, to learning that lasts. 

    Tarabai Modak, who lived from 1892 to 1973, is another. She won the Padmabhushan award in 1962 for her original contribution to the field of education.  She pioneered an approach that enabled impoverished rural children, and their parents as well, to learn from their daily experiences in their environment.  She was 65 years of age, when she set in motion her project to educate adivasis (indigenous peoples in India) through anganwadis (a government sponsored child-care and mother-care center), believing that if children cannot reach school, school should reach them.

    My exposure to Tarabai Modak’s ingeniously simple and inexpensive ways of using the learner’s available environment—to enable growth in learning skills and in the internalization of concepts related to maths, science, and geography—was my first experience of an authentic environmental approach to learning. 

  • Winners: Scholar Farmers Improving Agriculture

    In the Kibaale district of Uganda, small-scale farmers are revitalizing their trade and putting a fresh spin on traditional practices.

    With the help of the Uganda Rural Development and Training Programme (URDT), local farmers play an active role in their independence, researching and implementing sustainable systems that increase crop production and enhance the quality of life.

  • Winners Collaborate on New Education Venture

    Eric Glustrom and Ashley Shuyler are firm believers in the liberating powers of education.

  • Great Expectations: Encouraging Higher Education

    Our nation's brightest high school students shouldn't be denied a shot at a college education simply because they lack the necessary resources and support. With the proper guidance, a dose of high expectations, and a boost of confidence, one organization is proving that a little push goes a long way.

  • Citizen Philanthropy : DonorsChoose.org Responds to the Scarcity of Public School Learning Materials

    As a social studies teacher at a Bronx public high school, Charles Best discovered that teachers who needed learning materials for their students were having to dig into their own pockets to buy them for their classrooms. So he founded DonorsChoose.org, a website that for online, citizen philanthropy where teachers can list what the materials they need, and anyone can chose to donate the requested materials.

  • From Los Angeles Tweetup to Good Capitalist Party

    What started as a not-so-well-attended tweetup in Los Angeles in December 2009, only a few months later turned into a networker’s dream event of more than 700 social entrepreneurs, nonprofits and socially responsible businesses at the 2010 South by Southwest (SXSW) conference.  

  • Food for Thought

    Ask Raul Collazos about the fruits of Maestra Vida, his groundbreaking educational experiment in the villages of El Tambo, and he may tell you that one of his biggest successes is precisely that -- the delicious fruits grown by school children and their families in an impoverished corner of southwest Colombia.

  • Ana Moser: Shaking Up Sports In Brazil Before the 2016 Summer Olympics

    Ana Beatriz Moser is argueably the most famous and talented Brazilian volleyball player of all time. After two decades as a professional athlete who won many Olympic and World Championship medals, she could have entered into quiet retirement. Instead, Moser is making a lot of noise, trying to reform the way Brazil views sport and physical education by making sports accessible to children of all socioeconomic groups.