Anandam 2026: Gully Girl – A Story of Conviction and Courage

 

This year’s Anandam production for PY1 and PY2, Gully Girl, brought to life a powerful and timely story about courage, self-belief, and the determination to challenge stereotypes.

Set against the backdrop of a neighbourhood cricket culture, the production followed a young girl who dares to choose cricket—a space often perceived as dominated by boys—and persists despite doubt and exclusion. At its heart, Gully Girl was a celebration of gender equity, voice, and empowerment, reminding us that sport can be a powerful platform for identity and expression.

The evening began with a serene lamp lighting ceremony, accompanied by a moment of mindfulness and a universal prayer, setting a reflective tone. Our young emcees then took charge with confidence, introducing the story with clarity and poise, guiding the audience seamlessly into the narrative.

Through a blend of drama, music, and expressive choreography, learners brought the story to life. High-energy dance sequences recreated the vibrancy of a gully cricket match, while thoughtfully staged scenes explored moments of conflict, doubt, and growing empathy. Music added emotional depth, giving voice to the protagonist’s inner journey of resilience and determination.

As the narrative unfolded, powerful moments—both on the field and within the home and school environments—highlighted the challenges and support systems that shape a child’s aspirations. The turning point, set in a team dressing room, became a moving reflection of belief, perseverance, and the courage to keep going.

The performance concluded on a celebratory note with a spirited musical finale, where learners came together in a vibrant expression of unity, confidence, and joy—capturing the essence of triumph not just in achievement, but in belief.

Learning Beyond the Stage

Gully Girl was not just a performance, but a reflection of months of meaningful learning. Through the arts, learners developed:

  • Confidence in voice and expression
  • Body awareness and stage presence
  • Emotional understanding and character interpretation
  • Collaboration and ensemble discipline
  • The ability to connect movement, music, and narrative

More importantly, the production encouraged students to reflect on values of resilience, perseverance, and gender equity, reinforcing the idea that every child deserves the opportunity to dream, participate, and lead.

At its heart, Gully Girl reminds us:
The magic is not in the bat.
It is not in the applause.
It is in the conviction within.

 

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Anandam 2026: Little Lunchboxes, Big Stories

 

Early Years Anandam 2026 was a joyful celebration of imagination, expression, and meaningful learning through the performing arts. Titled “Little Lunchboxes, Big Stories,” this year’s presentation transformed familiar, everyday experiences into engaging stage narratives—allowing our youngest learners to explore themes of gratitude, responsibility, and thoughtful choices in an age-appropriate and meaningful way.

Through drama, dance, and music, children developed essential skills such as stage confidence, voice clarity, coordinated movement, listening, and collaboration. The production reflected not just performance readiness, but a deeper growth in self-assurance and expressive communication.

Bringing Stories to Life

The evening opened with “The Great Tiffin Box Strike,” presented by EY1 and EY2 learners. In this imaginative piece, everyday lunchboxes came alive with personality and emotion. Through expressive role play, children explored facial expressions, gestures, and voice modulation—laying the foundation for early theatrical skills. The narrative gently encouraged reflection on food habits, appreciation, and responsibility, all conveyed with humour and charm.

Dance sequences added energy and vibrancy to the performance, with learners demonstrating coordination, spatial awareness, and ensemble discipline. Music further enriched the experience, as children came together through action songs and rhythmic transitions, building confidence, listening skills, and a sense of unity.

The second performance, “Tenali Raman: Wit Over Noise,” by EY3 learners, transported the audience to a royal court setting. Through structured dialogue and expressive storytelling, students brought to life the wit and wisdom of Tenali Raman. This segment showcased growing theatrical abilities, including clear articulation, controlled pacing, and character differentiation. More importantly, it highlighted the value of calm thinking and thoughtful problem-solving.

Learning Beyond the Stage

Across both productions, learners demonstrated strong ensemble coordination—entering and exiting with awareness, maintaining formations, and supporting one another on stage. The performances reflected a shared sense of responsibility and teamwork, making Anandam a truly collective celebration.

The finale brought the focus back to the children—their confidence, creativity, and joy. Standing before an audience with pride and composure, they embodied the essence of Early Years learning.

Anandam 2026 celebrated far more than performance. It was a reflection of:

  • Growing language and communication skills
  • Emotional expression and confidence
  • Motor coordination and spatial awareness
  • Imaginative thinking and creativity
  • Independence and resilience

Through drama, dance, music, and play, our youngest learners showed that when given the space to express themselves, their inner magic shines brightly.

At its heart, Anandam reminds us that big lessons can come from little stories—and great confidence begins with the smallest steps on stage.

 

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Scriptoria 2026: Interschool Literature Festival

 

Scriptoria brought together young minds from across schools for a vibrant celebration of language, literature, and creative expression. Conceived as an inter-school literary fest, Scriptoria aimed to nurture deeper engagement with texts, encouraging students to think, interpret, question, and create beyond rote learning.

The fest was designed to encourage confident articulation, promote ethical thinking and perspective-taking, strengthen vocabulary and interpretative skills, and provide platforms for storytelling, visual narration, and performance, while fostering collaboration and healthy inter-school competition.

Scriptoria 2026 saw enthusiastic participation from 10 schools, with 180+ students from Grades 3 to 8 (ages 8–14) competing across a diverse range of individual and team-based events. The campus buzzed with creativity, curiosity, and the shared joy of literary exploration.

The competitions spanned poetry recitation, storytelling, elocution, and persuasive speaking, alongside creative expressions such as comic strip making, book cover design, collage, and street plays. Students also engaged in vocabulary and literature-based challenges, as well as thought-provoking activities that required them to respond to ethical dilemmas and interpret texts from multiple perspectives—bringing together language, imagination, and critical thinking in meaningful ways.

A defining feature of Scriptoria was the role played by our students as hosts and coordinators. They demonstrated key IB learner profile attributes such as being communicators, principled, and caring, while showcasing strong leadership and organisational skills. Their warm and welcoming interactions with participants and guests contributed to a positive and inclusive environment, reflecting a strong sense of international-mindedness and community.

Scriptoria 2026 witnessed thoughtful performances, imaginative storytelling, and a spirit of healthy competition. Students demonstrated not only linguistic ability but also empathy, creativity, and clarity of thought—bringing literature to life in dynamic and engaging ways.

The fest concluded on a high note, with participants leaving with new perspectives, strengthened skills, and a renewed appreciation for the power of language. Scriptoria continues to grow as a meaningful platform that celebrates voice, creativity, and the joy of storytelling, while nurturing confident and expressive learners.

 

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Iha Joshi Shines at ITF Junior World Tennis Tour (J60), Dehradun

Iha Joshi

Iha Joshi, a student of Grade 10 (Corbett) at Shiv Nadar School, Faridabad, has secured the Runner-Up position at the ITF Junior World Tennis Tour (J60) held in Dehradun from 16 to 22 March 2026.

This is a significant milestone, as the ITF Junior Circuit is an international ranking tournament, where players compete at a highly competitive level. Iha’s performance not only reflects her skill and determination but also marks an important step in her global tennis journey.

What makes this achievement even more commendable is Iha’s ability to balance her academic commitments alongside rigorous training, demonstrating discipline, resilience, and focus. Competing in international tournaments often requires extensive travel and exposure, making her accomplishment all the more noteworthy.

We congratulate Iha on this remarkable achievement and wish her continued success as she scales new heights in the sport.

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The Power of Questions: Nurturing thinking in an inquiry classroom

What makes learning meaningful?

Is it the information students remember? Is it the answers they write in an examination in a limited amount of time? Or is it something deeper- the ability to think, question, and make sense of the world around them?

In an inquiry-based classroom, particularly within the IB Middle Years Programme (MYP), learning begins with questions of different shapes and sizes and not just a predefined set of facts to be learnt. Questions are the engine of inquiry. They stimulate curiosity, guide investigation, challenge assumptions, and ultimately help students construct conceptual understanding.

However, an important misconception about inquiry is that every question must be profound or philosophical. Effective inquiry classrooms value questions at different levels. Some questions simply help students observe. Others prompt analysis. Still others push students to form conceptual generalisations. Together, these layers of questioning support the gradual development of thinking.

Read More: A Guide to Understanding the IB (DP & MYP) Curriculum

At its heart, inquiry is about creating learning experiences where students are encouraged to wonder:

Why does this happen?

How does this work?

What might this mean beyond this situation?

These are the questions that move learning from facts to understanding. 

Educational research on concept-based inquiry suggests that inquiry learning often begins by engaging students emotionally and intellectually, activating their prior knowledge, and inviting their initial questions before deeper investigation begins. In the MYP classroom, this phase is essential because it creates the conditions for meaningful learning rather than passive reception of information. 

A simple example illustrates how questioning can spark thinking. 

Recently, our MY1 students visited Dakshina Chitra, the living heritage museum in Chennai that showcases traditional homes and cultural practices from across South India. Rather than experiencing the visit as a passive tour, students were provided with a worksheet designed around guiding questions. These prompts asked them to observe details carefully: 

  • What materials are used to build these houses?
  • Why might homes in different regions look different?
  • What similarities and differences do you notice across architectural styles? 

At first glance, these questions appear straightforward. Yet they encourage students to move beyond observation to analysis and interpretation. As students explored the houses, discussions began to emerge. Some noticed that roof structures varied across regions. Others wondered whether climate influenced building materials. Gradually, students began connecting their observations to broader ideas about environment, culture, and adaptation. 

In this way, structured questioning became the starting point for conceptual understanding, a central goal of the MYP framework. 

As students progress through the programme, the nature of questioning evolves. In earlier years, teachers often provide more structured inquiry to guide thinking. Over time, students begin to take increasing ownership of the inquiry process. 

Read More: Community Project Session for IB MYP 3 at Shiv Nadar School Faridabad 

This shift becomes particularly visible in MY3 through the Community Project. Here, students are encouraged to identify issues that matter to them within their communities. Instead of receiving predetermined research questions, students frame their own inquiries: 

  • What challenge in our community needs attention?
  • Why does this issue exist?
  • What action could help address it? 

These questions reflect a deeper level of thinking because students are defining problems, exploring perspectives, and planning action. They go beyond simply gathering information. In this process, the teacher's role shifts from delivering knowledge to facilitating inquiry. 

Similarly, in science classrooms, students often design their own investigations. A teacher might begin with a broad conceptual question such as: What factors influence plant growth? Students then refine this into testable inquiries, designing experiments, collecting data, and reflecting on results. Through this process, they develop key Approaches to Learning (ATL) skills such as research, critical thinking, and self-management, along with disciplinary knowledge. Others help them organize their thinking and identify patterns. 

Read More:  Shiv Nadar School Noida is now an IB MYP Authorised School 

What becomes evident across these experiences is that questions guide every stage of learning. Some questions help students engage with a topic. Some help them investigate evidence.Eventually, students begin forming generalisations- statements of understanding that connect concepts and can be applied beyond a single example. When students reach this stage, they are developing ideas that can transfer to new contexts, which is beyond the recall of information without a context. 

This is one of the most powerful goals of the IB philosophy: helping learners build knowledge that is transferable and meaningful. This also helps in furthering our commitment to lifelong learning at Shiv Nadar School

Yet perhaps the most significant shift in an inquiry classroom occurs when students themselves become the questioners. Instead of waiting for the teacher’s prompts, they begin to ask: 

  • Is this always true?
  • What evidence supports this idea?
  • Could there be another explanation? 

These moments signal something important. They show that students are developing agency as learners, instead of merely participating in lessons as passive listeners. This is the goal of our MYP classrooms. 

In the end, the success of an inquiry classroom may not be measured by how many answers students produce, but by the quality of the questions they learn to ask to pursue meaningful journeys responding to those questions. When classrooms nurture curiosity, encourage reflection, and value thoughtful questioning, they cultivate learners who are prepared for the complexities of the world beyond school, beyond any single examination. 

Perhaps, then, the most important question we can ask ourselves as educators and caregivers is this: 

Are we creating spaces in the classrooms and outside where curiosity thrives? Are we modelling the thinking process that we want our children to embody? 

Because when students learn to ask meaningful questions, they begin to see learning as a journey of discovery of their own selves and the world around them.  

2026-03-19

Anandam – The Journey of Unbridled Joy

 

 "We all have our time machines; memories take us back, dreams take us forward"

The children of Foundation Nursey & KG concluded the year full of learning, discovery, confidence & joy through Anandam – The Journey of Unbridled Joy. This celebration reflected the wonderful growth of our children. Through music and movement, we revisit the experiences and happy moments that made this year so special.

To add deeper meaning, children coloured their Angavastram and dip it in natural turmeric (haldi), which symbolises purity, healing, safety, and positivity. A heartwarming moment is when each child places a kumkum handprint beside their teacher’s, creating a beautiful keepsake of their shared journey. The Angavastram is then given to them as a symbol of care and protection.

Anandam celebrated the happiness, milestones, and memories that were  created together
 

 

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Aryanveer Singh Khurana Wins Double Gold at International Karate Open Cup

Aryanveer Singh Khurana

Aryanveer Singh Khurana of Grade 3 at Shiv Nadar School, Faridabad, won two Gold Medals at the International Karate Open Cup held in Gurgaon in April 2026. His achievement highlights his dedication and strong performance at an international competitive level.

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Parent Sports Collective at Shiv Nadar School, Faridabad: A Year of Fitness, Community and Friendly Competition

 

At Shiv Nadar School, Faridabad, we believe that a strong school community is built not only through learning in classrooms but through shared experiences beyond them. The Parent Sports Collective, an initiative by the Parent Partnership Office, encourages parents to stay active, connect with one another, and celebrate the joy of sport together.

Throughout the year, each quarter featured a sport exclusively for parents, fostering fitness, camaraderie, and friendly competition.

Quarter 1 began with the Parents Table Tennis Tournament, which saw enthusiastic participation from around 65 parents competing across Men’s and Women’s categories. The event was marked by spirited matches and an atmosphere of friendly rivalry. Mr. Anoop Gautam emerged as the Men’s Winner, while Ms. Arti Bakshi secured the Women’s title.

Quarter 2 concluded on a high note with the Parents Badminton Tournament, bringing together nearly 85 parents competing in a League-cum-Knockout format across Men’s and Women’s Doubles categories. The courts were filled with energy and teamwork as participants showcased their skills. The Men’s Doubles title was won by Mr. Punit Madan and Mr. Yashu Bansal, while Ms. Vasundhara Nagar and Ms. Neha Singhal clinched the Women’s Doubles title.

Quarter 3 featured the much-anticipated Parents Cricket Tournament, with 120 players forming eight teams. Matches began on 31 October 2025 and continued through December, culminating in an exciting final. After a series of competitive games, SNS Vijeta, led by Captain Sunny Sapra, emerged as the champions, with players and spectators enjoying the lively spirit of the tournament.

The year concluded with Quarter 4’s Athletic Meet and a 12 km Cyclothon, where parents participated in events such as 100 m, 200 m, and 400 m races, Long Jump, and Shot Put across multiple age categories. The event celebrated endurance, enthusiasm, and sportsmanship, with parents cheering each other on and embracing the spirit of participation.

We congratulate all participants for their spirited involvement. The Parent Sports Collective continues to strengthen the partnership between school and families, reflecting the vibrant and connected community at Shiv Nadar School, Faridabad.

 

 

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Young Author and Changemaker at Shiv Nadar School Faridabad – Viraj Jain (MYP 3) Leads with Purpose

Viraj

Shiv Nadar School Faridabad proudly celebrates the sustainability journey of Viraj Jain (MYP 3), whose work reflects awareness, initiative, and a deep commitment to caring for the planet.

Happy Earth – A Child’s Voice for the Planet

Viraj is the author of Happy Earth, a sincere and thought-provoking book that speaks about environmental responsibility in a way children can understand and relate to. Written from a young person’s perspective, the book avoids complex terminology and instead focuses on emotions, values, and everyday actions.

In Happy Earth, Earth is gently personified as a living, feeling presence — one that thrives when nurtured and suffers when neglected. This approach helps young readers form an emotional connection with the planet, making the message personal rather than abstract.

The book thoughtfully explores:

  • The importance of respecting nature and biodiversity
  • The consequences of pollution and careless consumption
  • The role of small, daily actions in creating larger change
  • The belief that age is never a limitation in becoming a changemaker

What makes the book especially meaningful is that it comes from a student who leads by example. Viraj’s writing reflects sincerity and a genuine desire to influence positive behaviour, encouraging readers to see sustainability not as a distant global issue, but as a shared responsibility.

The SDG Anthem

Viraj also created an original SDG Anthem titled 17 Global Goals, One Vision — an uplifting musical piece that brings together the spirit of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals into one united message. At just 13 years old, he wrote, composed, and performed this anthem to inspire awareness, reflection, and real action toward a sustainable future.

The anthem is designed to resonate with young audiences by translating the 17 global goals into a collective call to care for people and the planet. The music encourages listeners to remember that working together — and acting responsibly — is key to addressing challenges like inequality, climate change, and environmental protection. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1-KkXSxLUrU

At Shiv Nadar School Faridabad, sustainability and global citizenship are integral to our learning culture. Viraj’s work embodies the spirit we seek to nurture — informed awareness, student agency, and purposeful action.

His journey reminds us that meaningful leadership can begin early, and when young minds engage with global challenges thoughtfully, they contribute to shaping a more responsible and hopeful future.

 

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Vir Taneja Wins Gold at the 8th Inter Warrior Gymnastics Competition

Vir

Vir Taneja of Grade 1 (Gir) at Shiv Nadar School, Faridabad, showcased remarkable enthusiasm and confidence at the 8th Inter Warrior Gymnastics Competition.

Competing in Level 1, he won the Gold Medal, marking an impressive milestone early in his sporting journey. His performance reflects determination and a strong foundation in gymnastics.

Heartiest congratulations to Vir on this outstanding achievement.

 

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