Indian Teacher Wins $1 Million Global Prize for Rural Education Model
Shuvajit Payne, a teacher from Maharashtra, has won the $1 million Chegg.org Global Student Prize 2024 for creating a network of over 400 village learning centres that have educated 15,000 children.
Key Takeaways
- Maharashtra teacher Shuvajit Payne wins $1 million Global Student Prize.
- His ‘Gramin Shiksha Kendra’ model has set up 400+ village education centres.
- Over 15,000 previously out-of-school children, especially girls, have been enrolled.
- Prize money will be used to scale the community-driven model nationwide.
From Under a Tree to 400 Centres
Shuvajit Payne’s mission began with a stark observation in Maharashtra’s tribal Melghat region. Children were not in school but working in fields or facing early marriage. Formal schools were distant and culturally disconnected.
He started by teaching a few children under a tree, using stones and leaves as aids. This grew into the ‘Gramin Shiksha Kendra’ (Village Education Centre) model.
The Community-Led Education Model
Payne’s approach is simple and radical. He establishes small learning centres inside villages themselves. Local women are trained as ‘Shiksha Mitras’ (Education Friends) to run them.
The curriculum blends standard subjects with local knowledge—folklore, agriculture, and environment—making it relevant and engaging for tribal children.
Scale and Impact
From one centre, the movement has expanded massively. Payne’s organisation, , now runs over 400 Gramin Shiksha Kendras across Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, and Jharkhand.
These centres have successfully brought more than 15,000 out-of-school children into education, with a strong emphasis on girls’ enrolment.
“The prize money is not for me; it’s for the mission,” Payne said after receiving the award. “This validates our belief that community-driven, contextual education is the key to unlocking the potential of India’s rural children. We will use this to scale our model to reach every child in the remotest corner of the country.”
Global Recognition at Indian Ceremony
The award was announced at a ceremony in India that also honoured Sister Zeph from Pakistan, winner of the parallel $1 million Global Teacher Prize. Her story of starting a school in her courtyard at age 13 to educate girls was celebrated.
The Varkey Foundation runs these prizes to elevate the teaching profession globally. The dual recognition highlights how community-rooted individuals are solving critical education challenges.



