Education for all: Here’s how Mohalla classes strive for continued learning of children from marginalised communities
Children are routinely encouraged to give up unhealthy habits and develop healthy ones.Oxfam India

What is unique about the approach is that children are engaged through child-friendly activities, and the classes are held close to the clusters where school kids reside. Mohalla classes work because there is no dependency on the internet, facilitators can assess the learning level of children, and children get to learn in a friendly environment in their neighbourhood.

Additionally, the mobilisers had to navigate unique social equations. “When we started working in Fatehpur, I remember people telling us to stay away from a Muslim ghetto. People told my team members that it would be a waste of time as no one from the community would participate in educational activities,” recalled Sinha. “Of course, we approached them and were successful in persuading them to send their kids to our classes.”

The gradual reopening of schools across the country presents new challenges to the state administration, parents and teachers that have to deal with an ‘education emergency’. Based on the experience of the past two years, it is clear that a bottom-up approach is needed where all the stakeholders, particularly local bodies such as gram panchayats, should be involved in the decision-making process.

At the same time, these practitioners advise revisiting the assessment parameters as the traditional ways to gauge the child’s progress no longer work in the context of the pandemic. In this regard, Mohalla classes not only serve as a tool to bridge the learning gap but also as testing groups for innovating better teaching and engagement methods.

Danish Raza is a guest contributor and an independent journalist based in New Delhi. He writes on inequality, current affairs and digital culture. ( Twitter: @razadanish)