Support STEM Education

Our Work

Support STEM Education

Curious minds need more than a textbook. We bring real science, technology and maths into the hands of children who would otherwise never get the chance.

A child who has never touched a microscope, opened a circuit board or written a line of code is not less talented — only less exposed. STEM literacy has become the single biggest gap between privileged and underprivileged children in India.

Our STEM programme is built on a simple idea: bring the lab to the child. We support partner schools with learning kits, set up science corners in low-income classrooms, run workshops and offer scholarships for promising students who want to pursue science further.

We focus deliberately on girls and first-generation learners, because they are the ones the system overlooks the longest.

The Reality

Why this matters

No labs, no practicals

Many low-income schools teach science purely from textbooks. Children memorise concepts they have never seen in action.

Maths anxiety

Without early conceptual support, maths quickly becomes the subject children give up on — and with it, every STEM career.

Cost of higher education

Even bright students from poor families step away from engineering, medicine or research because the path looks financially impossible.

Our Response

What we do

Hands-on learning kits

Affordable science and robotics kits distributed to partner schools, with teacher training so they actually get used.

After-school STEM clubs

Weekly clubs where children experiment, build, code and ask questions — without the pressure of marks.

STEM scholarships

Targeted financial support for students who want to pursue science streams in higher secondary and college.

Girls in STEM

Dedicated mentorship and visibility to women scientists and engineers, so girls can see themselves in those roles.

Outcomes We Track

What success looks like

  • Children able to demonstrate basic experiments and explain the science behind them.
  • Improved performance and confidence in mathematics across partner classrooms.
  • Girls choosing science streams in Class 11 in numbers comparable to boys.
  • Scholarship students completing diploma and degree programmes in STEM fields.

From the Field

Curiosity, in action

  • ClassroomInside the learning space
  • FieldworkOutreach, mobilisation & visits
  • WorkshopsHands-on training & demos
  • ScholarshipsSustained financial support

Stand with us on this.

Your support directly funds this programme — every rupee tracked, every outcome reported.

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