What’s school life without a bit of fun? Join Skipin to meet a community of children participating in academic contests, hackathons and fun activities. That helps you learn, compete, work in teams and build all round profile. #StartSkipin now to discover a whole new way to learn.
The wise owl impact story and our stellar board has been featured on Daily Hunt. Thank you for recognising the equal learning opportunity we are creating everyday.
@GlobeSlother
Also read the story at:
https://t.co/sVybnwlMq7
Bhoomi Bachwani, one of the mother influencers have gotten hold of the best learning mode for her child.
Go and download the Skipin app to experience the joy of learning.
Joe Arya one of the top 12 rankers in the owl’s Nature camp - the magical nature based hackathon hosted by @spotle.ai @wiseowllearning and @petaindia. We are glad to share that he loved the experience of the virtual camp.
This year start a refreshing, rewarding hobby. Start your home garden. It could be on a small space like a window sill, balcony or terrace. Grow simple to manage plants like peas, spinach and serve your salad straight from your garden. Go, show your green fingers.
@SpotleAI@her_aspire@AshishGupta237@GlobeSlother That is exactly the concept Skipin is based on. The future is adaptive learning. Traditional linear teaching concept is being strongly challenged for good.
@her_aspire@SpotleAI@AshishGupta237@GlobeSlother Systemic approach to bridge the digital gender divide. We need to go back to basics. Policies fostering educational innovation aimed at reducing disparities and actively supporting inclusion, especially gender-related will go a long way.
@SpotleAI@AshishGupta237@her_aspire@GlobeSlother Half of new smartphone users coming onboard by 2022, estimated at 260 million are class 1-12 students - mostly in rural India. The EdTech creators need to make these aspirant students a priority this time - in collaboration with the government.
@SpotleAI@AshishGupta237@her_aspire@GlobeSlother Contrary to the popular perception, rural India is very much ready to receive EdTech. Proportion of households owning a smartphone has significantly increased from 36 to 62% which is to say 1 in every 10 households bought a new phone last year to support their child’s education.
@SpotleAI@AshishGupta237@her_aspire@GlobeSlother EdTech needs to come out of elitism and should be democratised in its true sense. EdTech makers should make their product for ALL rather than targeting higher economic strata even when they are outside cities. Learning needs of the ‘left out’ students should be addressed.
@SpotleAI Edtech can cut across city tiers, income groups and level of learnings and can bring quality education to ALL. It can offer right kind of supplementary education that is much needed in suburban and rural India.
@SpotleAI In rural India, classrooms are overcrowded. While rural India has 70% of total students but only 57% of the classrooms.
Although overall Pupil to Teacher (PTR) ratio is reasonable, in secondary school the subject specific PTR is skewed.