“What do you need to develop as much as be?” Years in the past, when Satyam Mishra posed the query to a younger boy from Iraq, he anticipated the boy’s reply to imitate the most typical aspiration of kids who develop up in war-affected areas — ‘physician’. However Woleed was totally different. He needed to grow to be an architect.
“And what is going to you construct?” Satyam requested curiously.
“My metropolis of Mosul,” the boy replied, referencing his dwelling metropolis, which had been decreased to rubble in 2016 in what historical past describes because the deadliest city fight since World Conflict II. “I’ll rebuild my metropolis,” the boy affirmed, giving Satyam goosebumps that proceed to reappear each time he retells the story. Conflict and destruction, he realised, might uproot cities, however hope would proceed to reverberate within the ruins.
That day, in Woleed’s eyes, Satyam glimpsed a mirrored image of his youthful self — the half that was eager on altering the world. Right now, at 34, he’s elated at having stumbled upon a doable catalyst — instructor coaching. The final decade has seen Satyam trot the globe, coaching lecturers to innovate their approaches, construct highway maps for college students, and encourage research-oriented methods. “If we need to attain each youngster on the planet, instructor coaching is the best way ahead,” he emphasises.
In his chat with The Higher India, this Harvard pupil chronicles the itinerant journey he’s had, spanning 18 nations together with Nepal, South Africa, Lebanon, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Portugal, Slovakia, Austria, and Bulgaria.
Bringing a paradigm shift into school rooms and staffrooms
Worldwide, 69 million lecturers are wanted to succeed in common primary schooling by 2030. As instructor numbers depreciate, youngsters’s futures are caught within the crosshairs. A Forbes report suggests “improving the attractiveness of the instructing career to rent and retain instructing professionals”. It’s a multi-faceted conundrum, one might argue.
However, at the same time as nations bend their heads over the drafting board trying to work out a tangible answer, two packed luggage in a Harvard dorm room are able to play their half. Satyam Mishra will graduate in Might 2025 after which embark on his subsequent quest — coaching lecturers in japanese India, usually in Bihar and Jharkhand.
The situation right here is grim. In Jharkhand, a 3rd of main colleges are single-teacher ones; whereas in Bihar, attendance clocked for main and center college is an appalling 20 p.c and 23 p.c, respectively. Studies blame systemic apathy, burgeoning administrative duties and biases in direction of marginalised youngsters because the culprits.
Trainer coaching is seen because the non-negotiable sport changer, offering these educators with a surer footing to satisfy tutorial objectives whereas securing their spots on the identical taking part in discipline as their international counterparts.

Schooling can’t be a prerogative of these ‘fortunate sufficient’ to entry world-class assets, Satyam learnt whereas working with the Train For All community — a worldwide neighborhood of changemakers creating collective management to make sure all youngsters can fulfil their potential. As an alternative, schooling should work on the premise of fairness.
“Consider it this fashion,” Satyam urges, “By means of these instructor trainings, even a instructor, who won’t have the assets to discover different nations of the world and their instructing strategies, may have an opportunity to grow to be an developed educator.” The programme, whereas dismantling the dependency on age-old instructing strategies, will give new strategies an impetus.

These initiatives additionally give him an opportunity to create a tangible, lasting influence in colleges. As an illustration, in 2022, throughout his tenure because the Regional Director, Bahir Dar, Amhara for Train For Ethiopia, Satyam executed a toddler safety coverage which ceased corporal punishment, a commonplace in Ethiopian school rooms, in 17 colleges.

The years have been colored with such experiences. However ask Satyam to select a life-changing one from his archives, and he backtracks to 2017 when he was invited to show on the Malala Yousafzai All Women’ Faculty, a college based by Human Rights Activist and Nobel Laureate Malala Yousafzai in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley. “I had been studying up concerning the refugee disaster and exploring what I might do. Then, through the summer season of 2016, whereas doing an internship at IIM Ahmedabad, I acquired to know concerning the Malala college.”

Enjoyable truth: Satyam, unfamiliar with the lingua franca, was given the identical translator as Malala. “It was an expertise I’ll all the time bear in mind,” he smiles.
The varsity presents schooling and abilities coaching to feminine refugees aged 14 to 18, giving him a front-row seat to new fashions of schooling at play that transcend the definition of typical lecturers.
It additionally marked a primary for him in a crisis-affected space. About his expertise, he says, “Conflict zones are harmful and tough. However I used to be amazed to see how folks had made peace with their state of affairs. There was a way of calm. I used to be amazed by their resilience.”
‘At 7, I realised the ability of schooling’
A seven-year-old Satyam recollects his favorite pastime as being quizzed by his 72-year-old grandmother — “What does this phrase imply?” “What are they saying within the information?” It didn’t take him lengthy to grasp his grandmother wasn’t testing his information; she couldn’t learn or write.
And so, at seven, Satyam turned a tutor, serving to his dadima (grandmother) with the nuances of English. The day Satyam was promoted to Class 4, there have been additional mithais (Indian sweets) within the Mishra home — a double celebration if you’ll. In any case, dadima had simply grow to be formally literate. Satyam recollects the harmless pleasure he felt on the time — “I had the ability to make somebody literate.” His success along with his first pupil gave him the boldness to begin dreaming past his dwelling turf — past Bhagalpur.

The realisation of this superpower that he possessed was additionally the believable motive for his shift from engineering to instructing. The segue didn’t shock the household, who got here from a protracted line of lecturers throughout 4 generations. It was fated, they thought.
Satyam’s foray into instructing started with Train For India, the Pune chapter.

Each morning as he stepped into the Class 9 room, he could be greeted by a hollering of ‘Maths baba ki jai (All hail the maths wizard)’. Jaymala Pawar, the varsity helper, would intently watch the present, observing that Satyam made maths appear much less depraved than she’d thought it to be. In 2000, Jaymala had been so frightened of maths that she’d skipped her board exams. “I’ll show you how to try them,” Satyam promised her someday.
The subsequent few months had been stuffed with additional teaching, serving to Jaymala circumvent powerful ideas and in 2016, she tried the board exams and cleared on her first strive. No prizes for guessing the topic she discovered best.
Satyam’s journey as a instructor was as compelling as his present one as a instructor coach. Whether or not it was difficult ossified studying strategies, innovating avant-garde approaches to ideas or just sharing his learnings along with his college students.
His nomadic instructing profession has stretched his understanding of the potential of instructing. Inform him he’s performed some cool work and he’ll shrink back from it — “I’m simply getting began.”
‘If I can do it, you may too’
Rising up, Satyam believed Harvard and Hogwarts had been one and the identical. You possibly can’t blame him. Each are equally aspirational. Actually, each had a component of magic, Satyam found when he was supplied a scholarship in March 2024 that promised to cowl 83 p.c of his tuition charges. His youthful self would have discounted this as a fantasy, he says.
Recalling the way it unfolded, Satyam shares, “My professors inspired me to use to Harvard whereas I used to be pursuing my Fulbright scholarship in the US.” Satyam was one of many six lecturers chosen by the U.S. Division of State and the Fulbright Fee in India to pursue analysis in instructor coaching pedagogy.
Harvard was the one college he utilized to for a grasp’s diploma in schooling (Ed.M), and the remaining is historical past. He emphasises the type of fairness the institute prides itself on — circumstance isn’t any expertise differentiator. Satyam cites his instance, recalling his humble beginnings in Bhagalpur.

As soon as generally known as the ‘silk metropolis of India’, Bhagalpur was devastated by the 1989 communal riots. Town was shattered, and Satyam’s childhood was blotched with powerful circumstances. However he drew inspiration from his grandfather, Nishikant Mishra, a freedom fighter, who saved reiterating that the true that means of life could possibly be present in serving others.
“When my grandfather was within the freedom battle, folks would inform him to stop, saying that the British Empire had a stronghold. However he saved going. He was even arrested for 18 months in 1942.” Nothing might deter Nishikant and Satyam’s inherited artwork of blocking out critique whereas pursuing their calling.

From the second he would set foot in Bhagalpur throughout visits dwelling, taunts of ‘Yeh kar kya raha hai? (What does he even do?)’ would tail him round, generally within the type of a point-blank query posed by a courageous uncle, different instances enveloped in hushed whispers.
Then, in September 2021, when Satyam was introduced as a finalist for the International Trainer Prize — the newspapers talked about that he could be awarded 1 million {dollars} (translating to 7 crore Indian rupees on the time) — the uncles modified their stance. They shook his father’s hand and mouthed the identical phrases, ‘Yeh kar kya raha hai!’. Be aware the change in tone.
Notion is the whole lot, Satyam realised. In a second, instructing had taken on a brand new that means from one thing unrewarding to a cultural cachet.
However at the same time as society debates its connotations, the reality stays that the world wants lecturers. With out them, tens of millions of goals would grasp within the stability. Someplace in Iraq, Woleed goals of turning into an architect to rebuild hope in his metropolis. And, it’s solely a instructor who could make his dream come true.
Edited by Vidya Gowri Venkatesh, All footage courtesy Satyam Mishra