The Street School

Just 50 metres from the World Health Organization’s Delhi office lies a slum that is home to nearly 10,000 people. It’s a place where basic necessities like clean water and healthcare are scarce. Until a few years ago, education was an afterthought.

But within this stark landscape, stories of transformation have taken root, led not by institutions but by the very children once written off by the system.The street school began in 2015 with just five children. Its founder, Akash Tandon, then a young working professional, had grown frustrated with short-term social work. Along with his childhood friends – Kanika Narula, Sam Pillai, Leejo Joy and Monica Vamdar, Akash founded Pehchaan in 2015. As college students, the friends would visit slums and do voluntary work. “We were doing food drives and distributing clothes, but the impact ended as soon as we left,” he says. “We realised we needed to invest in something permanent, something that could stay even after we’re gone.”

That turning point came while witnessing children from a slum swim across a drainage canal near ITO, mistaking it for a swimming pool. “Someone had to tell them it was dangerous. More importantly, someone had to give them a shot at understanding the world differently.” That “someone” became Tandon and a group of like-minded volunteers.

At Pehchaan, education isn’t confined to academics. The volunteers also instill values, communication skills, and confidence. As the team started teaching the children, introducing them to dance, music, art, crafts and yoga as well, the word spread and the number grew to 100 within six months. Soon enough every child from the slum enrolled for the weekend classes and the pilot project turned into a successful model. Today, Pehchaan engages 500 volunteers from city colleges who help 1,000-plus slum children across 10 centres in the city. In spaces where formal classrooms are absent, such initiatives create room for learning, be it through basic literacy, digital skills, or simply the habit of showing up to study.

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