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The Shape of Everyday: Slate Scribbles

Author(s):
Hita Kumar, EkStep Foundation
Devina, Mudito

Inside a government school building in Anepalya, Bengaluru โ€” tucked into a room off a corridor โ€” sits a quietly functioning Anganwadi centre. The hum is immediate. Not noise. Not silence. A soft, balanced rhythm.

Children are spread across four learning corners โ€” life skills, block play, cognitive games, role play. In one corner, children are handling toy kitchen sets. Someone offers watermelon juice. Another calls out biryani. A doctorโ€™s set is in use nearby โ€” children putting on stethoscopes, injecting plastic syringes. In another group, towers are being built with blocks. It is clear this isnโ€™t performance. It is daily life.

โ€œThis is how it is every day,โ€ says Amrutha, Deputy Director at Makkala Jagriti, quietly. โ€œNot because youโ€™re here. You can tell. The engagement is natural. The energy โ€” itโ€™s not tense, and itโ€™s not still. Itโ€™s just right.โ€

In the middle of it all is Ghousia Sultana. She doesnโ€™t command the room. But sheโ€™s the one everything flows through. She has been running the Anganwadi for ten years.

She walks slowly from group to group, crouching or leaning in โ€” never towering over. โ€œWhat is this?โ€ she asks. โ€œWhat sweet have you made?โ€ She doesnโ€™t fill in the blanks. She waits. The children know how to respond.

The centre has 40 enrolled children. Most of them are Muslim. 60% come from migrant families โ€” Assam, Bihar, Bengal. Many of them speak multiple languages โ€” including Nepali and Kannada. Children often translate for each other.

There is a rhythm to how the space functions. Children identify their own name tags and wear them. Thereโ€™s circle time, where they sing with actions. Thereโ€™s a toy library โ€” families borrow toys for about a week. โ€œThe very poor hesitate,โ€ Ghousia says. โ€œTheyโ€™re afraid of breaking the toys.โ€

Parents now message her if their child is going to miss class. If she forgets to post a photo or update in the parentsโ€™ WhatsApp group โ€” which she created โ€” they check in. โ€œTheyโ€™ve become invested,โ€ she says. โ€œThey notice now.โ€

Zayn is one of the children who has changed over time. โ€œHe wouldnโ€™t speak or mingle with others,โ€ recalls Akshita, the field worker. โ€œHis parents were very strict. Now, he plays. He talks.โ€

Shaurya plays by himself in the corner, arranging animal toys. Occasionally, another child approaches him to say something. He responds. Then returns to his world. โ€œHe isnโ€™t officially enrolled,โ€ Ghousia explains. โ€œIf he was, weโ€™d have to show learning outcomes. But his parents were keen. The doctor said itโ€™s good for him to be here.โ€ She adds, โ€œHeโ€™s only about ten percent behind. Heโ€™s started speaking. He recognises letters. Heโ€™s very good with puzzles.โ€

What sustains all of this is not just the programming. Itโ€™s Ghousia.

She puts it simply: โ€œI always wanted to teach children. But I didnโ€™t know how. Makkala Jagriti showed me the way. And helped me understand how important these years are. I didnโ€™t know that before.โ€

Zameen Taj, the Anganwadi helper, has been here even longer โ€” sixteen years. โ€œI was the one who started this,โ€ she says. โ€œThere was nothing here then. Now it has grown.โ€

Still, the fact that the Anganwadi shares a school campus has not meant equal access. โ€œActually, the opposite,โ€ says Amrutha. โ€œWhen an Anganwadi visitor used the school washroom, people asked why. During a school function, when biscuits were distributed, these children were left out. When the school building was upgraded, this room was ignored.โ€

There is no direct coordination between departments. And yet the Anganwadi runs โ€” and thrives.

What makes a model Anganwadi? โ€œItโ€™s the worker,โ€ Amrutha says plainly. โ€œHer motivation. That canโ€™t always come from outside. It has to come from within.โ€

Of the 49 Anganwadis in the area, 20 are now considered model centres. โ€œWe started with ten,โ€ she adds. โ€œWeโ€™re having long-term conversations with workers โ€” around purpose, mastery, autonomy. About what sustains motivation.โ€

There are systems in place โ€” learning templates, teaching-learning materials created by volunteers, a parent activity book, a child assessment card issued by WCD. But the relationship work sits beyond all this.

During parent meetings โ€” ten have been held in the past year โ€” Ghousia walks families through why play matters. She leads

them in simple exercises โ€” like joining dots on a brain diagram to explain development. She shares stories of how different environments shape children. โ€œThatโ€™s when the โ€˜ahaโ€™ moments happen,โ€ says Amrutha. โ€œThey get it.โ€

On ECCE Day, the centre had a photo booth. On Graduation Day, parents attended. Photos are shared on the group. Some parents send videos back. Others put them up as their WhatsApp status.

Ghousia doesnโ€™t speak in frameworks. But her daily practice is full of intent.

This isnโ€™t a shiny space. But it is a steady one. What you see here isnโ€™t a single programme working well โ€” it is a long, consistent act of care. One that has made the centre not just functional, but trusted.

And the person at the centre of that? She doesnโ€™t stand at the front of the room. She moves through it.

โ€”–

This story is part of Voices of Careโ€”an ongoing inquiry into the caregiving systems that shape childhood in India. By understanding what enables care to thrive, we uncover what allows children to flourish.

Slate Scribblesโ€”a series of on-ground reflections from our visits, documenting the people and practices that quietly hold up a childโ€™s world.

A heartfelt thank you to the team at Makkala Jagriti for opening up their space to us. A space shaped gently by trust, consistency, and the belief that small gestures, repeated daily, can build something lasting. This note is drawn from what we saw, heard, and quietly understood: that even in systems with constraints, it is people who make the centre hold.

 

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