Most of us may not know that the Indian state of Kerala has played an essential role in shaping Bhutan’s modern education system to be the way we know it today. Here’s how the construction of this new reform took place.
Kerala resident K V Narayani has spent 50 years walking from house to house every day to teach students. Watch this video to see why she decided to take up this role.
“I think one of the best pieces of advice Saritha ma’am has given us is to use rice starch as a pesticide. The insects get stuck on the plant because of starch’s sticky nature. I found this to be a great alternative to chemical pesticides,” says Anagha, a student.
From just 197 students, today this primary school has almost 700 students and a farm of their own and there's no turning back for this primary school in Alappuzha.