Its non- profit school.Parijat Academy was started in 2003 with four chilldren in a small room with tinroof and bamboo wall. Parijat means heavenly flower in Assamese.
We are little Parijat
Beautiful mother Axom
Heavenly flowers we are little Parijat
Parijat Academy's little Parijat
Love is our religion
Learning is our worship
Lighting the lamp of
Knowledge, meditation, melody
We march ahead
Heavenly flowers we are little Parijat
We shall remove the darkness of ignorance
We shall build a new Axom,
With the valour of veer Lachit
We will build a new generation
Heavenly flowers we are little Parijat.
-Dr Mrinmoyee Bordoloi
Boys:
1.White Shirt
2.Navy Blue Long Pant/half Pant
3.White Long Pant/ Half Pant ( Wednesday & Saturday)
4.Navy Blue Sweater/ Blazer ( For Winter)
Girls
1.White Shirt
2.Red coloured Ribbon
3.Navy Blue Skirt
4.White Skirt . ( Wednesday & Saturday)
5.Navy Blue Kameez, white pyajama, white dupattah
6.White kameez, white pyajama, white dupattah ( wednesday & saturday)
7.Navy Blue Sweater/Blazer ( For winter)
Balck shoes and white socks for both girls and boys. White canvas shoes and white socks for both girls and boys.
The future belongs to you, dear boys and girls. You have therefore, to prepare yourself for the active participation in the world you live in and to have to say in the reshaping of the world. Develop yourselves, then into intelligent, well informed and responsible men and women.
Try to excel in whatever you do always remembering that there is scope for continuous improvement. make the best use of the facilities that your home, your school and your country provide to you.
New Session will start from January 2017 and school hours will be as follows NURSERY to KG: 8:00 am to 10:00 am Pupils must be on the school premises at 7:45am Class 1 to Class 10: 10:00 am to 2: 30 pm Pupils must be on the school premises at 9:30 am
HOUSE SYSTEM
Each house has House Master/ House Mistress, Captain & Vice Captain. Every child is given an opportunity to bring out the best in him/her.
Name of Houses Colour
Deepor Beel Blue
Pobitora Yellow
Kaziranga Green
Manas Red
Life Skill Programme was conducted at Parijat Academy on 28th November 2016 with support from National Foundation for India and Foundation for Social Transformation. There was 90 students participant. The outcome of the activity is awareness on adolescence issues, their behaviour towards the society.
Dear Friends,
You can donate old cloths to Parijat Academy. You might be curious to know what we do with old cloths. Here at parijat Academy the children are from poor family as your used cloths in good condition may help to many needy people at Parijat. We distribute them among the children and to their parents and they feel so happy. Therefore, you can help by spreading among your friends and family. Anything like shirts, pants, laddies cloths, baby cloths, besdsheets, mattress, pillow, carpet, used computer, toys etc.
Contact: Uttam Teron @ 9954778447
email: parijatacademy03@gmail.com
We kicked off our movement with Uttam Teron's initiative 'Parijat' to educate special kids.Located on the lush green outskirts of Guwahati, Parijat is founded by Uttam to help underprivileged kids with free education. It began when Uttam started the school with just 4 students and now he schools more than 550 students. We had the opportunity to not only play live music at Parijat but also collab with Uttam's special gems. We composed an impromptu song called 'Here we are' and sang along with the kids. We request all of you to join us and help us grow as a community. We need you to bring in the change. Also, do stay tuned for our first video. :)
This is the story of an ordinary person doing the extraordinary, an unsung hero working in silence, blazing torches in the dark. This is the story of Uttam Teron. Born and brought up in Pamohi village of Assam, Uttam Teron belongs to the Karbi tribe. Uttam was just as ordinary as anyone. He still is.
“I would spend the day with friends playing football. I had a care-free life. My friends and I would go to a nearby forest, cut firewood and sell them in the market; there was no guidance from home regarding education and we did not understand the value of education much those days. Moreover, I wasn’t a good student. However, my mother was strict and wanted me to study,”Uttam recalls.
UTTAM TERON, a young man
from Pamohi, nearly 20 km from the city of Guwahati, who dreamt of 100 per cent
literacy for the children of his village much before the Right to Education
Bill was even introduced in the Indian Parliament.
With a paltry amount of Rs.
800 which he gathered from his tuitions, Uttam Teron started his school,
Parijat Academy in 2003 with just four children in his old cowshed with just a
tinroof and bamboo wall, a pair of
desk and bench and one blackboard. “Parijat” means “heavenly flower” in
Assamese.
What
started with just 4 children, Parijat Academy today has more than 500 students.
The school adheres to normal school timings and have classes from Nursery to
class 10 offering subjects like Assamese, Hindi, English, Mathematics, Science,
Social Science and art work. Besides, programmes like computer learning, sewing
lessons for girls, sports, dance and library are also offered. Milk is served
to all nursery students twice a week besides serving Mid-Day meal for all the
children.
Uttam’s
exceptional work is being recognized far and wide. Visitors like NASA astronaut
Edward Michael Fincke visited the academy to see its functioning apart from
volunteers coming from different parts of India and overseas to teach the
children in different activities like photography, agriculture, health, sports,
art and crafts, adventure programme, computer, yoga etc.
Recognizing
his efforts, Uttam Teron was awarded the CNN IBN Real Heroes Award for his
relentless contribution to the society.
An unsung hero working in silence, Uttam Teron dreams of achieving a 100 per
cent literate village by giving educational opportunity to every
underprivileged child.
* ONE TEACHERS ROOM ( WITH DONOR NAME) Rs 4 LAKH
* ONE KINDERGARTEN CLASSROOM ( WITH DONOR NAME Rs 4 LAKH
* TWO CLASSROOM( WITH DONOR NAME) Rs 8 LAKH
* ONE HALL ROOM FOR MULTIPURPOSE FOR CHILDREN Rs 4 LAKH
*One Science Lab Rs 4 lakh
*One hostel room for girls Rs 4 lakh
* Sanitary project for girls Rs 2 lakh
*One Computer room Rs 4 lakh
* 20 computer set with tables Rs 7 lakh
Parijat Academy, one of the B1G1 Worthy Cause Partners, is bringing change to tribal villages in the Assam area of India by providing a free school for underprivileged children. The school was opened in 2003 with just 4 students in attendance, in a room near a cow shed with a tin roof, bamboo walls, and only two chairs and a bench to welcome them.
Surprisingly, parents in the area didn’t like to send their children to school because they thought education simply takes too long. They wouldn’t see any results in a short period of time, and couldn’t earn money through their children if they’re sitting in a school for months at a time. So initially, the parents in Pamohi were not much interested in this new ‘academy’.
But today that’s all changed. There are now 510 children attending Parijat Academy from 14 different tribal communities! It took some time to convince their parents, but now they too have become true believers in the value of a good education. There is great demand now for a place in the classroom, where the instructors do their utmost to make reading and writing a fun, rewarding experience. It’s a non-religious and non-profitable school providing free education.
Classes at Parijat Academy
Parijat Academy’s Founder and Principal Coordinator, Uttam Teron, told us about his approach to learning:
“We give quality education through activities that make learning joyful. Children generally don’t like a lot of reading and writing. They want fun, and through fun there is learning. We have classroom time, but we also organise nature treks, trips to different places, and we bring in volunteers to help us bring knowledge to life.”
Seven years before the Right to Education Bill was introduced in the Indian Parliament, Uttam was himself a young man from Pamohi. Back then, he dreamed of 100 per cent literacy for the children of his village. Education was the lowest priority in this hamlet though, and most children, especially girls, helped their parents in the fields.
International volunteers are now flowing to Parijat (meaning “heavenly flower”) Academy. Amy Partridge, a recently arrived American volunteer, is infusing new life to the school after coming to India from a similar project in Korea. She’s making learning a fun process, and the students love it.
“I really admire the mothers who defied the social norms to send their children to our school when it all started just a decade ago.” Amy said, “And I’m doing everything I can to make sure the children learn a great deal here.”
There is no tuition fee for students at Parijat Academy; they provide free education to their students, with classes from the Kindergarten level to Grade 10.
Uttam Teron was given the CNN-IBN Real Hero Award for his work recently. The award and its profile have helped the school, but Parijat Academy remains heavily dependent on assistance from friends and well-wishers – and B1G1.
“It is very difficult being in one part of India, trying to convince people in other parts of the country to help.” Uttam Teron said. “We want 100 percent of our poor children to be educated. It will take 15 to 20 years to bring the desired change in this area. That’s a long term project, but we have made a wonderful beginning.”
Click on the images below to see some of the life-changing projects from Parijat Academy you can support as a B1G1: Business for Good Partner:
This is the story of an ordinary person doing the extraordinary, an unsung hero working in silence, blazing torches in the dark. This is the story of Uttam Teron. Born and brought up in Pamohi village of Assam, Uttam Teron belongs to the Karbi tribe. Uttam was just as ordinary as anyone. He still is.
“I would spend the day with friends playing football. I had a care-free life. My friends and I would go to a nearby forest, cut firewood and sell them in the market; there was no guidance from home regarding education and we did not understand the value of education much those days. Moreover, I wasn’t a good student. However, my mother was strict and wanted me to study,”Uttam recalls.
Answering his inner calling
But he had a calling. He loved to teach. He taught the village children whenever time permitted and noticed the children’s poor reading abilities. “They could not spell properly and some were even irregular in the government primary school. It was disheartening to see some even discontinue their studies.” Fate took a turn for Uttam thereafter. “It juststruck my mind that I had to start a school for these underprivileged children free of cost at my home with limited children.”
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But money was a huge factor and his parents were not pleased with his idea. “There was no money!”Uttam laments. But this did not in any way deter him and Uttam strode ahead. With a paltry amount of Rs 800 which he gathered from his tuitions, he started Parijat Academy in 2003 with four children in his old cowshed with just a tin roof and bamboo wall, a pair of desk and bench and one blackboard.
’Parijat’ means ’heavenly flower’ in Assamese. “My parents would remind me time and again then that such work would bring no money and repeatedly say, ‘Think twice before going long-term; do not trouble us or yourself’. They’d also remind me that had I worked at a private company, I could bring home money and help my parents”. But things changed for the better and Uttam’s parents realised their son’s dreams, his passion. “They began to feel positive about my work gradually.”
It was a steep climb
All was, however, not hunky-dory. Frustration would easily seep in and thoughts of giving up would haunt Uttam. “Increase in number of children means need for extra classrooms, furniture, teachers’ honorarium and so many other things. But I would get a grip of my patience and keep telling myself, ‘I cannot spoil these children’s futures; they have come to learn at Parijat Academy’.” Uttam would collect old books, notebooks, used furniture, old clothes, shoes and socks, used school bags, whatever useful he could find for the school children. “They act as bait because children love these little things and therefore, are regular in school,” he says.
Bearing fruit
What started with just 4 children has today burgeoned to 540 students and 23 teachers at Parijat Academy. The school adheres to normal school timings and have classes from Nursery up to class 10 offering subjects like Assamese, Hindi, English, Mathematics, Science, Social Science and art work. Besides, programmes like computer learning, sewing lessons for girls, sports, dance and library are also offered. “We not only look after their education, but also ensure the children are nourished,” Uttam says while informing that milk is served to all Nursery students twice a week besides serving Mid Day meal for all the children. “We also give away food bags once a month for 25 children.”
It’s a rocky road
But the challenge of raising funds always creeps in. “If lucky, we receive donation from individuals sometimes. We also accept old clothes, old bed-sheets, old notebooks- half-written, half-good for our school children.” Uttam started a programme called ‘Support a Child’ via which an amount of Rs 300 is given per child for education. “We save this money and give to our teachers as salary as there is no regular income of the school.” The monthly expenses of the academy and staff salary is roughly Rs 60,000. “Sometimes I can’t pay them their salaries,” Uttam reiterates that fund raising is still the main constraint.
And he continues to tread
Uttam’s exceptional work is being recognised far and wide. Visitors like NASA astronaut Michael Fincke, who is also a colonel of the US Air Force, and volunteers from afar often visit the school to see its functioning. “Sometimes volunteers help contribute on children’s education and also support in making classrooms, sewing machines, computer systems, desks and benches, etc.” In 2011, Uttam was also awarded the CNN IBN Real Heroes Award for his contribution to society.
Uttam has educated 11 villages and plans to introduce classes 11 and 12 at the Academy. “I have no particular free time and play with my hostel children. I’ve recently brought 23 children from a remote forest village and am keeping them at the hostel.”
He dreams of achieving a 100 per cent literate village and he has achieved 98 per cent of it.“I am happy Parjiat Academy is creating awareness on education. When children come for admissions to the school, our teachers help in filling up the admission forms as most parents are illiterate. The parents now value education. Nothing satisfies me more than eradicating illiteracy and giving an education opportunity to every underprivileged child; it also reduces child labour,” the hero notes.
Uttam rightly concludes, “Education is a birth right. It can change a person’s life; it can change a village.”
NOTE: If you want to contribute towards Parijat Academy, you may do so by donating to the following mailing address: