Teaching for Tomorrow, Learning for Life.

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A personalised, project-based, and purpose-driven approach to education is taking root at VIBGYOR Group of Schools.

In this article, you’ll discover:
➡️ 21st-century skills: Why adaptability is the true advantage
➡️ Live classrooms: Tech, touch, and thinking
➡️ Workshops and immersion programmes: Real experiences, real growth
➡️ The power of the 5C’s: Skills that shape futuresAnchored in India, connected to the world
➡️ Expanding horizons, staying grounded
➡️ Teachers at the heart of inspired learning
➡️ Education with a purpose: The VGOS promise

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At one of our VIBGYOR High classrooms in Bengaluru, 13-year-old Anushka stands before a whiteboard, thinking with a marker in hand. She glances towards her left side and retorts, “Don’t erase that! It is the best idea we have got.”

Dhruv laughs, shaking his head. “Fine, but if it fails, it is on you. I warned everyone.”

Arjun, who had been quietly sketching in the corner, leaned forward. “Wait, what if we combine Anushka’s idea with mine? Her solar panel with my reflective sheet. That way, we can double the light.”

“Double the light or double the chances of disaster,” Tanay teased, drawing a groan from the group.

“Or double the chances of brilliance,” Anushka shot back, underlining her arrows with determination.

The group burst into giggles, jostling for space at the whiteboard.

Their teacher walked past, pausing to take in the chaos and laughter. “Looks like a debate, not a diagram.”

“It is both,” Anushka said confidently. “That’s the fun part.”

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Moments like these capture the spirit of VIBGYOR Group of Schools (VGOS): learning that is personal, hands-on, and purposeful. Every classroom becomes a space for creativity in education, with ideas being challenged, tested, and celebrated with intent.

21st-century skills: Why adaptability is the true advantage

The importance of 21st-century skills in school education lies in preparing students for the world they will inherit. With climate concerns intensifying, AI transforming industries, and societies becoming interconnected, the future calls for learners who can think clearly, adapt quickly, and act with empathy and purpose.

Yet, the challenge is steep. UNICEF warns that over 50% of students may leave schools without essential future-ready skills, hampering employability by 2030. Another report finds that just 9% of students show high readiness in critical thinking, problem-solving, and design thinking.

At VIBGYOR Group of Schools, every learning experience is shaped with this reality in mind. Through hybrid learning models, personalised learning approaches, and a focus on soft skills development, our students learn to think with purpose and grow with resilience.

Live classrooms: Tech, thinking, and hands-on learning

In our classrooms, learning shifts from passive listening to active learning, transforming them into hubs of discovery. This includes:

Workshops and immersion programmes: Real experiences, real growth

Learning extends outside classrooms through VIBGYOR Viva workshops – from robotics, poetry, culinary arts, theatre, and more – creating immersive opportunities and making these workshops a shared journey of growth. Parents have also described how their kids return “full of ideas” and carry on the conversations at home.

These immersive learning experiences help children adapt to the diversity and complexities of society. They are also instrumental in building soft skills development and encouraging critical thinking and problem-solving.

The power of the 5C’s: Skills that shape futures

At VIBGYOR Group of Schools, we champion the 5C’s – critical thinking, creativity, collaboration, communication, and citizenship. These aren’t abstract ideas; they shape our everyday thinking and learning experiences.

Whether through debates, projects, or classroom discussions, students practice listening, reasoning, and expressing ideas with clarity. These skills move past academics, teaching them to work in teams, respect diverse viewpoints, and take responsibility as young citizens. By combining thoughts with empathy and action, the 5C’s prepare learners to lead with purpose in a connected world.

This commitment takes root in initiatives like VIBGYOR High’s Model United Nations (V MUN). Here, our students simulate diplomacy, sharpening communication, critical thinking, and emotional maturity. It becomes an arena where soft skills breathe and grow.

Anchored in India, connected to the world

Our curriculum and pedagogy merge India’s educational policy with global models. It also follows child-centric values drawn from Mahatma Gandhi, Maria Montessori, John Dewey, and other early childhood educationists. Our classrooms integrate tradition with innovation, promoting STEM and 21st-century skills and competency-based education.

This approach aligns well with the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 and the National Curriculum Framework (NCF) 2022, rooted in play, inquiry, and child-focused learning.

Expanding horizons, staying grounded

A strong sense of identity doesn’t limit a student’s view; it, in fact, helps shape them. At VIBGYOR Group of Schools (VGOS), we encourage our students to look at the world with fresh viewpoints while staying firmly connected to their Indian roots. Every programme is thoughtfully designed to broaden horizons and nurture essential 21st-century skills for students.

Our Global Immersion Programme gives our senior students the opportunity to visit leading institutions such as Ashoka University, Shiv Nadar University, and even universities in the Netherlands and the USA. These journeys spark curiosity within students, build confidence through communication, and foster empathy for cultures beyond their own.

Closer to home, the Cambridge Pathway at VIBGYOR World Academy in Bhopal and Nagpur brings an internationally recognised curriculum into everyday learning. In these technology-rich classrooms, a future-ready curriculum helps students grow as critical thinkers, creative problem-solvers, and adaptable, confident learners, qualities that prepare them for a future without boundaries.

Teachers at the heart of inspired learning

Behind every inspired learner stands a prepared teacher. Our schools place strong emphasis on professional development, helping educators stay current with modern practices – from integrating AI in education to adopting personalised learning approaches.

At VIBGYOR Group of Schools (VGOS), this commitment is strengthened by our Quality Assurance and Guidance (QAG) programme, which rests on three key pillars: audits and guidance, continuous professional development, and rigorous recruitment. Audits and guidance uphold excellence by empowering teachers and students, while continuous professional development equips teachers with training strategies that meet the diverse needs of our students. And through rigorous recruitment, we ensure that skilled, passionate, and dedicated teachers lead every classroom.

This approach aligns with the vision of NEP 2020, which emphasises the importance of continuous professional development in teaching.

Education with a purpose: The VGOS promise

What sets our schools apart lies in what our students learn, how they learn, who they learn with, and the world they are prepared to face. Every choice – of method, space, and mindset – is intentional, nurturing confidence, creativity, and connection in every learner.

Education today is about preparing students for tomorrow’s uncertainties. At VIBGYOR Group of Schools, 21st-century teaching strategies come alive through hybrid learning models and a deep focus on soft skills development. Children grow with curiosity – learning to question, create, connect, and care. For parents, this means an education that builds adaptability, empathy, and confidence. That is the promise of VIBGYOR: shaping learners today for the world that awaits them.

And because conversations on learning go beyond the classroom, tune into VIBGYOR’s new podcast, Beyond the Bell, for ideas, experiences, and fresh perspectives on education. Watch it here.

Introducing Infinite Possibilities Brought to Life

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We at VIBGYOR Group of Schools have always believed that education extends beyond the classroom. It’s about recognising that every child holds a universe of aspirations within them, some already defined, others waiting to be discovered.

We are delighted to unveil our new campaign, “Infinite Possibilities Brought to Life.”

Why This Campaign Matters

When we see our VIBGYORites, we don’t just see who they are now; we see who they can be. A child building something with blocks could become tomorrow’s engineer. A child doodling in a notebook might one day paint on the world’s largest canvas. A singer at a morning assembly could grow up to move millions with their voice.

Every potential is valuable, and every potential deserves to be nurtured.

Our VIBGYORites at the Heart

This campaign comes straight from the heart. We haven’t used any models or actors. Every child featured in our Brand Campaign for 2026-27 is a proud VIBGYORite. Their faces, their names, and their genuine passions are what you will see. Each one embodies the spirit of wonder and aspiration that makes VIBGYOR unique.

By putting genuine students at the centre of this campaign, we are making a promise: that every student who walks through our gates will be seen, celebrated, and supported on their journey.

How We Bring Dreams to Life

Possibilities don’t just appear out of thin air. They require guidance, encouragement, and a supportive environment to come to life. That’s what VIBGYOR aims to create every day.

  • Through our teachers, who are not only experts in their field but also mentors who cultivate potential.
  • Through our academics, which go beyond memorisation and prepare children to face an evolving world.
  • Through our philosophy, which balances knowledge and creativity, confidence, and character.

This is the invisible thread that connects the child standing in the classroom today with the adult they will be tomorrow.

A Note to Our Community

To our students: We see you and believe in you.

To our principals and teachers: Thank you for creating these experiences every day.

To our families and parents: Thank you for entrusting us with your child’s future.

This campaign isn’t just about what VIBGYOR achieves; it’s about what we, collectively, can make possible.

P.S. Admissions for the academic year 2026-27 are now officially open. Call us to schedule a visit to a VIBGYOR school and discover the infinite possibilities for your child’s future.

 It Takes Two To Teach

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When parents and teachers listen, learn, and lead together, children thrive.

In this article, you’ll discover:
• The lost connection: Reconnecting with Gurukul roots
• Why parent involvement in education matters
• Lessons from India: Ground-level success stories
• Global viewpoint: What the world is doing
• Ways to build a strong school and parent partnership
• Pitfalls that parents should watch out for
• Interactive moments: Quick reflections for parents

These are not just passing thoughts. They are the quiet emotions that live between home and school – the gap where a child’s struggles often go unseen. So, when schools and homes function in isolation, children slip through the silence. A stronger school and parent partnership creates student support systems that listen before judging and help children grow.

The lost connection: Reconnecting with Gurukul roots

In ancient Gurukul systems, education wasn’t confined to the classroom. A guru was a lifelong anchor who nurtured wisdom and shaped character. Parents, peers, and elders contributed to the child’s learning journey. That was a genuine parent-teacher relationship: holistic, constant, and collective. Today’s education system needs to rediscover that synergy.

As digital learning and exam ranks take centre stage, rebuilding that living network, where parents, teachers, and communities work together, is essential for maximising educational support for children.

Why parent involvement in education matters

Studies across the globe consistently show that children perform better when their parents are involved in their learning process.

In 400 villages in Sitapur, Uttar Pradesh, PAHAL activities included opportunities for parents to get involved with their children’s homework, which saw dramatic improvements in literacy levels.
The 2008 Family Involvement and Children’s Literacy study by Harvard Graduate School of Education explains that when individual parents became increasingly involved in their children’s education from kindergarten to fifth grade, children’s literacy performance increased as well, on average.

These numbers represent something deeper: students who feel supported at home and understood in school experience the kind of confidence that textbooks alone cannot build.

Lessons from India: Ground-level success stories

Each of these showcases innovative parent-teacher collaboration that’s rooted in real life.

  • NIPUN Maharashtra Mission

Under the NIPUN Maharashtra Mission, lakhs of mothers stepped into the role of educators as part of the state’s Foundational Literacy and Numeracy (FLN) initiative. Many of these women, who had little formal education, hosted learning circles in their homes. This grassroots movement redefined the parent-teacher relationship, placing families at the heart of the learning process.

  • Parenting Month in Jharkhand

Aligned with UNICEF guidelines, government schools in Ranchi organised ‘Parenting Month’, a month-long series of activities honouring the role of parents in child development. The Jharkhand Education Project Council (JEPC) instructed schools to implement a dedicated parenting activity calendar, which the Block Resource Person (BRP) and the Cluster Resource Person (CRP) monitor daily.

  • Chandigarh’s Mission 100

In May, the UT education department launched Mission 100, where several government schools in Chandigarh organised special parent-teacher meetings to encourage collaboration between teachers and parents in developing plans for extra classes and guidance to help students clear their supplementary exams.

Global viewpoint: What the world is doing

While India leads in community-based learning methods, some global experiences also focus on parent involvement in education.

The 2013 Getting Parents Involved: A Field Experiment in Deprived Schools article by The Review of Economic Studies mentions that parents of middle-school children in France were invited to participate in a simple program of parent-school meetings on how to get better involved in their children’s education.
A study conducted in 2019 found that in rural China, around 6,000 students and 600 teachers found that schools with more active communication between home and school saw significant drops in learning-related anxiety and improvements in achievements.
A Collaborative Approach to Enhance Quality Education in Foundation Phase Inclusive Classes in South Africa 2024, an article by ResearchGate, claims that several South African schools, guided by the Ubuntu principle, have implemented inclusive teaching through collaborative partnerships between schools, stakeholders, and parents, where each of their roles is clearly defined.

Ways to build a strong school and parent partnership

  1. Weekly WhatsApp check-ins
    • How it works: Teachers share brief voice notes summarising the week and inviting parent feedback
    • Why it matters: It is real-time, regular, and personal and builds parents’ confidence in supporting learning at home
  1. Solution-focused PTMs
    • How it works: Instead of discussing only marks, focus on topics such as “Supporting exam stress” or “Exploring better reading habits at home”
    • Why it matters: These sessions shift the conversation from evaluation to co-creation, using reports as touchpoints, not endpoints
  1. Parent orientation on foundational learning
    • How it works: Host orientation sessions for parents of Grade I-III students about how children learn – phonics, number sense, and curiosity
    • Why it matters: Empowering parents with basic tools and strategies creates a stronger learning environment at home, especially during early childhood when habits and mindsets are formed
  1. Co-host learning days
    • How it works: Invite parents to co-design and participate in ‘Family Learning Days’ with storytelling corners, group math games, or science demos
    • Why it matters: When parents actively participate in learning activities, it strengthens mutual respect and reinforces that education is a shared responsibility, not limited to school hours
  1. Community-led curriculum labs
    • How it works: Parents as volunteers can co-lead book reading sessions, gardening clubs, or science project groups, aligning with the school curriculum
    • Why it matters: When learning spills into community settings, it deepens learning through real-world applications and creates shared curiosity across households

These actions shape a stronger student support system across school and home.

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Sakshi and her science project

A quiet 9-year-old Sakshi came home one evening with a science project assignment. Wanting her to do well, her mom jumped in – researching, designing, and building the model. At school, the project drew praise, but Sakshi stood silently beside it, unsure of how to explain something she hadn’t made.

Her teacher noticed this, and during the next PTM, she gently asked, “How much of this did Sakshi build on her own?”

That night, Sakshi finally confessed, “I wanted to try… but it felt like you already knew the right way.”

That is when her mother realised that she had meant to support, not overshadow. So the next time, she asked, “What’s your idea? How do you want to do this?”

The project that Sakshi built wasn’t perfect and had its own flaws. But Sakshi was proud of what she had created. And this time, the applause felt earned.

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Interactive moments: Quick reflections for parents

Take a moment and answer these questions:

  • Have you spoken to your child’s teacher beyond exams?
  • Do you know this topic is being taught in school this week?
  • Have you asked your little one what they are finding difficult to learn?
  • What is the one thing you can do this week to support your child’s learning?

These aren’t big demands, yet they make a big difference. When your child witnesses that you are making an effort with their teacher, they learn to trust more deeply.

Education doesn’t end with homework sheets or exam marks. Its impact travels home through discussions around the dinner table, weekend reading, or bedtime stories. Parent-teacher collaboration is that bridge, turning classrooms and homes into synchronised spaces of understanding, resilience, and care.

It is time we revive the spirit of the ancient Gurukul, where learning thrived in community, values, and deep relationships. Children feel seen, heard, and empowered when the school and parent partnership is an ongoing and sincere effort. Because the strongest classrooms are built by trust, teamwork, and the quiet power of connection.



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