Learning Without Pressure: The Classroom of the Streets
Learning Without Pressure: The Classroom of the Streets In an age where children's schedules are packed tighter than a suitcase—tuition after school, coding classes on weekends, piano lessons on Sunday—there is a generation that looks back and breathes a sigh of relief. We escaped the race. Not because we were lucky, but because we grew up in a time and place where childhood was still allowed to be childhood. In the chawls and slums, learning had no syllabus. There were no competitive exams, no grading systems, and definitely no pressure. Our classroom was the street. Our teachers were our friends. And the skills we learned? They weren't for a resume. They were for life. Less Tuition, More Play While children today rush from school to coaching class, we rushed from school to the playground. Our homework was finished in twenty minutes, often scribbled on the stairs or balanced on a friend's back. The real work began when the books were shut. We learned to climb trees (and ho...