When our family moved to Frankfurt, Germany, our daughter was just two years old. Like any parent in a new country, I was anxious about her starting at a Kita β the German word for KindertagesstΓ€tte, or "children's day centre."
On her first day, I expected worksheets and structured lessons. Instead, I walked into a room full of light, colour, and laughter. Children were painting with their hands, building towers out of wooden blocks, planting seeds in a little garden, and singing songs in a circle on the floor. There were no desks. No textbooks. No pressure.
And yet β these children were learning. Deeply. Joyfully. Naturally.
Over the months that followed, I watched our daughter transform. She went from a shy, quiet toddler to a confident little person who asked questions about everything, made friends effortlessly, and came home every day bursting with stories. She wasn't "taught" in the way I had been taught growing up β she was guided, encouraged, and given the freedom to explore at her own pace.
That's when I understood something that would stay with me forever: children don't need to be pushed to learn. They need to be given a safe, warm space where curiosity is celebrated, where play is taken seriously, and where every child is seen as an individual.
"I kept thinking β why can't children in Palamaner have this? Why should this kind of joyful, child-centred learning only exist in Frankfurt or Berlin? Our children deserve it too."
When we returned to India, that question wouldn't leave me. I spent months researching early childhood education frameworks, visiting preschools, and talking to educators. When I found Futuron's play-based curriculum, it felt like the closest thing to the Kita philosophy I had experienced in Germany β structured enough to meet Indian educational expectations, but rooted in the same belief that children learn best through play, exploration, and love.
Sri Nidhi Edu is the result of that journey. Every decision we make β from how we design our classrooms to how we hire our teachers β is guided by one question: "Would this feel right in a Kita?" If it would, we do it. If it wouldn't, we find a better way.
Our daughter's time in Frankfurt didn't just shape her. It shaped me. And now, through Sri Nidhi, it shapes the way we nurture every child who walks through our doors.