Season of Synergy - Handshakes to Hashtags

 

As part of the Parent Partnership Office, the Season of Synergy carnival, themed “Handshakes to Hashtags,” was a joyful celebration of togetherness and connection.

This parent led event brought parents, students, and teachers together to relive memories by going down the memory lane through arcade games, creative stalls, storytelling corners, and hands-on activities for all age groups.

The carnival featured over 30 parent led stalls, including student author stalls, interactive creative hubs, and the KNMA stall, which added vibrant colours to the event through canvas art and tote bag making activities. A wide variety of food stalls celebrating diverse flavours and cuisines further enhanced the festive experience.

The atmosphere was made even more special with mesmerising performances such as a magic show for kids, nukkad natak, carol singing, along with fun activities like tug of war and musical chairs, filling the day with laughter and excitement.

With enthusiastic participation from parents, students, and teachers, it was truly a pleasure to come together and celebrate the spirit of Handshakes to Hashtags through collaboration, creativity, and shared joy.

 

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Kiara Gera Wins Silver at City-Level Kickboxing Championship

Kiara Gera Wins Silver at City-Level Kickboxing Championship

Kiara Gera of Grade 4 Gir of Shiv Nadar School, Faridabad at the 100th Asmita Kickboxing Faridabad City League, held on 20–21 December 2025. She delivered a confident performance and secured the Silver Medal in the Point Fight event.

With this win, Kiara has qualified for the Zonal League, scheduled to take place in January 2026 in Jammu.

We congratulate Kiara on her achievement and wish her continued success as she prepares for the next level.

 

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Funkaar | Middle Years

 

Funkaar at the Middle Years is a celebration of experiential and creative learning through art, culture, and inquiry.
It is a collection of experiences that encourage students to think critically, imagine boldly, and create with purpose. Funkaar captures the spirit of interdisciplinary learning  where subjects blend and boundaries blur, sparking curiosity, connection, and joy.
This year, under the theme “India: Now and Then,” students will journey through time to explore how the past continues to shape the present. They will discover how traditions evolve, how communities sustain their crafts, and how every generation leaves its mark on India’s unfolding story.
- Grade 6 will explore India’s weaving and craft traditions — uncovering stories of pattern, sustainability, and community.
- Grade 7 will trace the evolution of governance and culture — connecting ideas of leadership and identity across time.
- Grade 8 will examine power reflecting on whose voices history remembers and whose are left behind.
Throughout Funkaar weeks, learning will extend beyond classrooms into the world. Students will meet various artisans, engage with experts, and walk through historic spaces where India’s living heritage comes alive.

 

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Young Changemakers Turn Ideas into Impact at Lumina 2.0

 

Shiv Nadar School Noida brought together brilliant minds from 15 schools, over 300+ participants, including students, educators, NGOs, and community leaders who celebrated the power of Creativity, Activity, and Service at Lumina’s second edition.

Through partnerships with NGOs and work on legacy projects, young minds transformed ideas into tangible impact. These collaborations revealed the true potential of youth-led change. By engaging with real communities and challenges, students discovered their capacity to lead with empathy, innovate with purpose, and create lasting solutions that ripple beyond the classroom.

And this is where Lumina steps in, a launchpad that equips students with the vision to gauge endless possibilities, the courage to act, and the connections that help their ideas live and grow far beyond the conclave.

 

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Shiv Nadar School Faridabad Wins Dialectic Dash Inter-School Debate

Shiv Nadar School Faridabad Wins Dialectic Dash Inter-School Debate

The Shiv Nadar School Faridabad school team Aarika Dixit (Grade 8), Adheesh Kapur (Grade 8), and Vidit Arora (Grade 6) emerged winners at the Dialectic Dash Inter-School Debate Competition held at Shiv Nadar School, Noida on 12th December 2025.

With this victory, the team has brought the rolling trophy back to the Faridabad campus for the second consecutive year, reflecting both consistency and depth in debating.

The team remained undefeated across all six rounds of the heats, demonstrating exceptional clarity of thought, confidence, and articulation throughout the competition. Adding to this strong performance, Aarika Dixit was adjudged Best Speaker in the Semi-Finals, while Vidit Arora received the Best Speaker award in the Final round, where he was described by the adjudicators as “a live wire.”

 

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Building Awareness, Protecting Young Lungs

 

In response to rising Air Quality Index (AQI) levels and increasing respiratory concerns among children, Shiv Nadar School Faridabad conducted an online Respiratory Health Awareness Session on 6 December 2025. The session was organised to support families with timely, evidence-based guidance on safeguarding respiratory health during periods of poor air quality.

The session was led by two parent experts from the medical fraternity: Dr. Manisha Mendiratta, Associate Director & Head of Pulmonology, Sarvodaya Hospital, and Dr. Prashant Mehta, Senior Consultant – Hematology, Medical Oncology & Bone Marrow Transplant, Amrita Hospital, Faridabad. Their insights combined clinical expertise with practical, everyday applicability for families.

The discussion was thoughtfully moderated by Ms. Preeti Gautam, Head – Early Years, who ensured a structured flow of conversation and facilitated parent questions with clarity and sensitivity. Parents engaged actively throughout the session, raising relevant concerns and seeking guidance, making the interaction both meaningful and informative.

During the session, the speakers highlighted the direct impact of elevated AQI levels on lung health, particularly for young children, the elderly, and individuals with pre-existing respiratory conditions. Parents were guided on recognising early warning signs such as persistent cough, wheezing, noisy breathing, recurring sore throats, and shortness of breath, with emphasis on the importance of early medical consultation.

Practical preventive measures for home and daily routines were discussed in detail. These included the use of HEPA-based air purifiers, avoiding ionisers and ozone generators, maintaining adequate hydration, reducing outdoor exposure during poor AQI days, and preferring wet mopping over dry sweeping to minimise indoor dust circulation. Clear guidance on masking was shared, recommending N95/KN95 masks for effective protection during high AQI periods, while noting that surgical and cloth masks offer minimal defence against air pollution.

Parents were also advised to regularly monitor AQI levels and make informed adjustments to daily routines. Avoiding outdoor activities near high-traffic areas and kerbside walking was strongly recommended. When outdoor activity is unavoidable, the relatively safer window identified was between 10:00 AM and 4:00 PM.

The session concluded with a strong emphasis on preventive care, informed decision-making, and shared responsibility between the school and families in ensuring children’s respiratory health and overall well-being. The initiative reflected Shiv Nadar School Faridabad’s continued commitment to proactive parent engagement and holistic student care.

 

 

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The Unscripted Curriculum

Article authored by: Chinar Banga

Head Senior Years, Shiv Nadar School Faridabad

 

Schools are synonymous to learning. Books, curriculum, assessments, lesson plans, report cards will automatically cloud your thoughts when you think of school. We often assume that the scripted curriculum of the school or what the board prescribes will lead to students’ progress. In middle and high school particularly, you will notice a sudden shift in parent and teacher mindset where they would only want to work towards a target score. However, what we often forget is a powerful force that often shapes student behaviour, beliefs, attitude and values. It is the unscripted curriculum that has a significant role in their development. It has, in fact, more impact than calculus, history, force or other concepts they learn in school. What defines this unscripted curriculum, is how the adults around these students conduct themselves in the school environment. Philip Jackson in his book, ‘Life in Classrooms’ referred to conscious and unconscious norms, values and behaviours of the learning process, including unplanned and unintended learning outcomes that influence students. It is not necessary that only the teachers are being noticed. 

The leaders, administrative staff and even the support staff behavior also doesn’t escape their watchful eyes. They internalise lessons from every interaction they witness in corridors, cafeterias, assembly halls and other spaces. Albert Bandura, in his Social Learning Theory, emphasizes the importance of observing, modeling and imitating the behaviors, attitudes and emotional reactions of others. This becomes even more profound in higher grades. Adolescents in middle and senior school have heightened social awareness and are in their identity formation phase. As a result, what they see around them becomes a reference point on how they will react to different situations and relate to the world around them. A high school student who is testing boundaries and is moving away from authority will have a sharp antenna for detecting hypocrisy. If what is being preached, is not modelled, they will rebel. For example, a school poster or policy may display the value of kindness, however, if the teacher behaviour is otherwise, the trust of the child in the system shakes. When students see teachers conducting themselves with professionalism and mutual respect, they will mirror it. When they see that the school culture is of celebrating each others’ success, respecting support staff, leaders taking and valuing feedback and agency, the ripple effect will be visible. 

On the contrary, gossip, envy, passive aggressive behavior will lead to more effort on teachers’ part in setting classroom expectations and managing the behavior for learning. It is therefore, every adult’s responsibility, to model behaviors that they would want their students to imbibe. School culture is driven by the choices the adults make when no one is watching. But the irony is that students are always watching! When students see people around them owning up mistakes, apologising to a fellow colleague, greeting support staff cordially, appreciating diverse perspectives, working in teams, they will organically develop the values of accountability, teamwork, respect and compassion. Since the interactions are not limited to the physical space and extend to the virtual world as well, teachers need to display explicitly respectful online interactions to expect the same from their students in the digital world. The good thing is that evolving this unscripted curriculum is not something impossible. Every school needs to have a systemic approach to develop these values and soft skills over a period of time. 

Schools that recognise the value of this unscripted curriculum will equip their children with an ethical compass that will guide them home. Teacher professional development sessions, admin and support staff briefing sessions, leadership workshops should have a special mention of the acceptable behaviours around students. Investment in socio-emotional learning of school teachers sees its students developing maturity and empathy. It is also very important to note that the way we assign consequences to the students is also something to look at. Punitive actions may lead the students to believe that mistakes are shameful. However, a consequence rooted in responsibility and reform will make a difference. When students walk out of school, they will carry with them the lessons of the curriculum which are delivered by gestures, daily choices, routines and rapport of the adults around them in school. The students’ skills to adapt and thrive in a new college environment, being resilient to challenges in a workplace or their conduct in a social gathering will be a reflection of what the have seen through their formative years. 

As adults around children, we need to be conscious of what we bring to table everyday and the example we are setting for them. To develop ethical, happy and purposeful citizens of the society, the adults around them need to be emotionally intelligent and reflective in nature. Let’s not forget that the students are learning the scripted and the unscripted curriculum everyday!

2025-12-09

Festival of Golden Glow in Tbilisi Georgia.

 

The festival was held in Tbilisi, Georgia, from 14th to 21st November 2025. Our troupe had the privilege to perform Kathak at 2 different locations, first at the Embassy - a Guru and shishya Rudrastakam performance. The next 2 performances were at the festival venue where our 14 students performed Ganesh Vandan and Nritta ( Paran, Ladi, etc). 

Performing and presenting a glimpse of our culture at an international level was an experience par expectations.

We would like to wish our little stars more luminosity on the stage of their dreams.

 

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Tie and Dye Workshop

 

India is a land where every 100 mts the landscape, weather, language, food, and celebrations change. The common thread is the vibrant colours!

Celebrating the colours was a workshop held as part of the Parents' Collective engagements for the month, led by our educator Ms Rampriya. The participants experimented with simple dyeing techniques through various twists and turns, folds, beads and seeds tied in, they created wearable art pieces - stoles and handkerchiefs. 

A fun morning,  just as any doctor would recommend!

 

 

 

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Storytelling to celebrate Children s Day

 

On Children’s Day, our school had the pleasure of hosting a talented storyteller, Ms Seema Wahi Mukherjee, who brought a sense of
wonder and excitement to our students. With her expressive voice, vibrant props, and warm presence, she drew the children into an
interactive storytelling experience. Students were encouraged to participate, respond, and even take on small roles, making the session lively and engaging.
 

For Kindergarten, she narrated The Fairy and the Dragon, using her props beautifully to bring each character to life. Through this
magical adventure, students not only enjoyed the story but also absorbed an important message about perseverance—continuing to
try even when things feel challenging. 

For our Nursery and Foundation Years, she told a heartwarming friendship tale about Fuffu the Frog, who meets different characters on his search for a friend. Students shared delightful anecdotes about what they enjoyed most—how the tiger taught Fuffu to run, the importance of sharing, and how the parrot became his friend.
Both sessions were filled with laughter, curiosity, and active participation. The children remained captivated from the beginning to the end, and their enthusiastic reactions reflected just how much they enjoyed the experience.

 

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