When Adolescents Choose Discomfort

What Happens When Identity Meets Courage By Pavan Goyal(Workshop co-led with Sucheth Davuluri, CEO, Neuland Laboratories — 3 November 2025) Blue Blocks adolescents reflected on identity and comfort a week after their “Seeking Discomfort” workshop. Their honest responses reveal how courage, awkwardness, and self-awareness shape true growth in Montessori adolescent education. 1. The Week After […]
How Fossils Form: Iron, Time, and Selective Replacement in a Forty-Million-Year-Old Crocodile Skull
How fossils form is one of the questions children begin asking very young. The honest answer takes them into chemistry, deep time, and the slow conversation between organic matter and the rocks around it that unfolds over millions of years. Our Research Head, Sreemoyee Chakraborty, recently posted a short report with Professor Dhurjati Prasad Sengupta […]
What Teenagers Can Really Do: Our Students Are Building Two Satellites at Once

When parents and educators ask what teenagers can really do, the honest answer requires looking at adolescents who have been given work that can actually fail. Most school programs do not provide this kind of work. Tests with predetermined correct answers, projects whose outcomes are pre-scoped, exhibitions assessed against rubrics rather than against reality — […]
Teaching Kids to Handle Failure: What Our Students Did When Their Satellite Was Lost

This blog draws on two publicly archived sources: the verbatim presentation transcript of three Blue Blocks adolescents at the 30th International Montessori Congress in Mexico, and the case study paper “Valorization in Orbit: An Adolescent CubeSat Mission” presented by seventeen Blue Blocks adolescents at the 7th National Montessori Conference ( Saparya, Mumbai), January 2026. Direct […]
Teaching Teenagers Engineering: How Adolescents Convinced a Satellite Company CEO in 30 Minutes

When we approached Ronak Samantray — CEO and founder of TakeMe2Space, an Indian satellite company that builds and launches real spacecraft — about collaborating with our adolescents on a CubeSat, he was not sure adolescents could do this kind of work. He said so directly. That was the right response from him. Teaching teenagers engineering […]
Raising Curious Children: How does curiosity at age 3 become a project at age 13?

We wrote earlier about how to raise a curious child — the small, daily, slightly resistant questions a three-year-old asks about bedtime, shoes, and the colour of leaves. This piece is about what those questions become. Raising curious children is a ten-year proposition. The question a three-year-old asks at the dinner table, and the project […]
What Happens When a Teenager Asks for Summer Homework: Research Identity in a Montessori Adolescent Program

In the final session of a four-week palaeontology program I ran for the Erdkinder cohort at our school, one of the students asked me if she could have summer homework. The school year was about to close. She wanted, before it did, to know what she could keep working on through the holidays. She did […]
Why Twelve Adolescents Started a Palaeontology Program and Three Finished It: Attrition as Evidence in Erdkinder Montessori

Twelve adolescents at our school joined the first session of a four-week palaeontology program this April. Eight returned for Session 2. Four returned for Session 3. Three completed Session 4 and continued working with us after the school year ended. The numbers are the most useful single data point in the case study, Blue Blocks […]
From Pink Tower to Satellite: Three Montessori Adolescents at the AMI Congress

Three adolescents from Blue Blocks Montessori School in Hyderabad stood on the main stage of the 30th International Montessori Congress in Mexico, in front of 1,500 attendees from the global AMI community, and walked the audience through their work — from the foundational Montessori material every one of those 1,500 trained adults had once placed […]
Self-Expression in Montessori: How a Five-Year-Old Speaks to a Stranger Without Help

A five-year-old stood at his stall at our annual school event and explained his project to visitors he had never met before. He had no script. No adult prompted him. The visitors had not been prepared in advance with the right questions. His father, watching from a few feet away, told us afterwards: “He’s just […]
Child-Led Learning: Three Sentences From a Mother at Explore Montessori 2025

A mother at our annual school event answered three of our questions in three short sentences. Asked what she had learned from supporting her daughter’s project for the day, she said: “Children, when given freedom to explore, think beyond limits and surprise us with their creativity. Learning becomes deeper when it is children-led.” Asked how […]
