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Learning to Read in India's 'Grandmothers' School'

Aajibaichi Shaala is not your ordinary school. At 'grandmothers' school' in Fangane, India, elderly women get the chance to learn how to read.
Aajibaichi Shaala is not your ordinary school. At 'grandmothers' school' in Fangane, India, elderly women get the chance to learn how to read.
learning to read in india s  grandmothers  school
Drupada Pandurangkedar, 70, who studies at Aajibaichi Shaala (Grandmothers' School), poses for a photograph outside her house in Fangane village, India, February 15, 2017. Credit: Danish Siddiqui/Reuters
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Drupada Pandurangkedar, 70, who studies at Aajibaichi Shaala (Grandmothers' School), poses for a photograph outside her house in Fangane village, India, February 15, 2017. Credit: Danish Siddiqui/Reuters

Drupada Pandurangkedar, 70, who studies at Aajibaichi Shaala (Grandmothers' School), poses for a photograph outside her house in Fangane village, India, February 15, 2017. Credit: Danish Siddiqui/Reuters

Fangane: Aajibaichi Shaala is not your ordinary school in India.

The students at "grandmothers' school" in the village of Fangane are elderly women who are getting the chance to learn to read.

"I love going to school," Kamal Keshavtupange, 60, told Reuters as she washed clothes outside her home in the village, 120 km east of the financial capital, Mumbai.

India's literacy rate grew to 74% in the decade to 2011, according to the latest census, but female literacy continued to lag the rate for males by a wide margin.

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About 65% of women were found to be literate, compared with 82% of men, according to the 2011 report.

Education experts and researchers have cited outdated attitudes toward women, including a preference for male children over females, and child marriages as main reasons for the lower female literacy rate.

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At Aajibaichi, afternoon classes in the one-room school are held six days a week for two hours. The lessons are timed so the women can finish their chores, or their work in the fields, before attending class.

One of the few requirements is that all students are at least 60 years old.

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"My knees hurt, so I can't sit on the floor for long. That's the only problem. But I still go every day," said Keshavtupange.

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Clad in pink saris, their school uniform, the women walk every afternoon along dusty village paths to their lessons.

"First I finish all my house work, then I go to school. It's good we have this in our village,” said 70-year-old Drupada Pandurangkedar. Her eight-year-old granddaughter studies in the government primary school in Fangane.

The women begin class with a prayer and then dive into their lessons, writing on slates to practice.

The school uses teaching aids such as the alphabet painted on tiles which can be read by students with poor eyesight. Many of the aids are made by the students.

Sheetal Prakash More, their 30-year-old teacher, said she would like to see women in other villages get the same access to education.

"Every other teacher teaches children. Only I have the opportunity to teach elderly women," More said. "It's a great opportunity and I am very happy to teach them."

(Reuters)

This article went live on March sixth, two thousand seventeen, at forty-six minutes past five in the evening.

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