Robo Aashik's STEM Labs: Revolutionizing Education Across 490+ Indian Schools
VMPL
Chennai (Tamil Nadu) [India], November 18: A childhood spark of curiosity has grown into a nationwide educational revolution as engineer-innovator Aashik Rahman, fondly known as Robo Aashik, transforms the learning experience in more than 490 schools across India through experiential STEM education.
From tinkering with tiny lights on his bicycle in a quiet Tamil Nadu village to building robots during his engineering years, Aashik's journey has been driven by imagination, problem-solving, and a belief that children learn best by doing. His early experiments--robots that fed his pigeons or alerted his mother when it rained--shaped his vision for an education system rooted in creativity and curiosity.
The impact has been far-reaching. During the COVID-19 pandemic, students trained in these labs created robotics solutions that contributed meaningfully across India. Beyond technical proficiency, the labs foster critical thinking, confidence, teamwork, and real-world problem-solving. The initiative also ensures inclusivity through specialised modules for visually impaired students and livelihood-oriented STEM programs for underserved communities.
Today, schools ranging from premier private institutions to rural government campuses have been transformed into dynamic innovation hubs. Aashik's organisation provides teacher training, student mentorship, and support to integrate STEM learning into core school activities. Corporate partners including Amazon, TCS, TVS, and UltraTech have enabled this transformation through their CSR wings, ensuring access for economically disadvantaged students. One notable success story is that of a tea-master's son who, after building an award-winning robot in a Creator Lab, went on to pursue engineering--becoming a source of pride and possibility in his village.
As India rapidly advances toward a future defined by robotics, automation, and artificial intelligence, Aashik Rahman stands at the forefront--empowering the next generation not just to adapt to the future but to invent it. In his own words: "Our goal is not to teach children technology. It is to teach them the confidence that they can build it."
For more details, please contact: Aashik Rahman, Propeller Technologies: - +91 7338710091
https://www.propellertechnologies.in/
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