Teach For India, a non-profit committed to addressing educational inequity, has introduced the Arts Fellowship, a new initiative designed to integrate arts into education and build leadership skills among fellows.
This program is the second addition to Teach For India’s flagship two-year Fellowship Program, which places young professionals in under-resourced classrooms across India. The Arts Fellowship aims to help children explore art forms profoundly and develop a lifelong appreciation for creativity. The new full-time, paid fellowship, which begins in January 2025, will focus on providing high-quality arts education to students in underprivileged communities. Fellows will work to bridge the educational equity gap by encouraging students’ voices, creativity, and self-expression through diverse art forms, enhancing their academic and personal development.
Shaheen Mistri, Founder and CEO of Teach For India, expressed her excitement about the launch, saying:
This is an extremely emotional moment for us. Reflecting upon 15 years of Teach For India’s journey has been nothing short of a gratifying experience. With 1000 fellows and 5000 alumni impacting 50 million children nationwide, we have been working relentlessly towards bridging the ed-inequity gap in the country and building a nation of leaders.
She added:
By launching the new Arts Fellowship, we hope to help students deeply immerse in local and global art forms and instil in them a lifelong appreciation and pride for artistic expression, enabling them to lead with creativity, compassion, and a commitment to societal change.
Teach For India’s mission is to ensure that every child in India receives an excellent education. The organization envisions a future where leadership, creativity, and equity are at the core of education, helping to eliminate poverty and create opportunities for all.
Through its existing two-year Fellowship Program, it equips young leaders with tools to drive change in underprivileged classrooms and the broader education system. The addition of the Arts Fellowship is expected to expand this impact, using arts as a medium to inspire critical thinking, empathy, and innovation.
The move is part of Teach For India’s broader strategic plan of extending its reach throughout India. By 2032, the company hopes to boost its operations to 3-5 new cities, bringing the total to 11-13 across the country. In keeping with this expansion, the platform intends to train 50,000 leaders from various fields, including teachers, school leaders, teacher trainers, entrepreneurs, student leaders, and government officials.