Reliance Foundation Hosts Global Education Summit on Early Childhood Learning

Reliance Foundation hosted the second edition of its 'Building Flourishing Futures' convening in Mumbai, focusing on early childhood and primary education. The event brought together over 250 practitioners for masterclasses and knowledge exchange on creating inclusive learning ecosystems. Isha Ambani emphasized that education must meet children's emotional, social, and cognitive needs to foster joyful learning. International experts from institutions like Harvard and Monash University shared insights on enabling lifelong resilience and well-being through foundational education.

Key Points: Reliance Foundation 'Building Flourishing Futures' Education Summit

  • Focus on early childhood & primary education
  • Platform for global educator exchange
  • Emphasis on emotional safety & belonging
  • Evidence-informed, human-centric approach
2 min read

International and Indian education experts share insights and innovations at Reliance Foundation's 'Building Flourishing Futures' convening on Early Childhood and Primary Education

Global experts convened at Reliance Foundation's event to share innovations in early childhood and primary education for lifelong impact.

"When education meets children where they are... it creates the foundation for meaningful and joyful learning. - Isha Ambani"

Mumbai, February 10

Insightful dialogues, knowledge exchange and practice sharing on early childhood and primary education, were the focus of the 'Building Flourishing Futures' convening held by Reliance Foundation, on February 7th and 8th at the Nita Mukesh Ambani Junior School.

The vibrant programme at the two-day convening with over 250 education practitioners from India and across the world, included masterclasses and learning labs, for cross- learning on innovations in foundational learning, for lifelong impact, as per the Reliance Foundation press release.

Rooted in the vision of Reliance Foundation's Founder and Chairperson Nita M Ambani, the convening underscored a shared belief that every child is a world of possibility. This was the second edition of 'Building Flourishing Futures' and the theme 'Meeting Learners Where They Are: From Early Childhood to Primary Education' highlighted how nurturing relationships, emotional safety, and a sense of belonging in the early years, enable lifelong learning, resilience, and well-being.

Speaking about the event, Isha Ambani, Director, Reliance Foundation and Vice Chairperson, Nita Mukesh Ambani Junior School, said, "When education meets children where they are -- emotionally, socially, and cognitively -- it creates the foundation for meaningful and joyful learning. At Reliance Foundation, our work in early childhood and foundational learning is guided by an evidence-informed, deeply human belief, that children flourish when they feel cared for, warm, safe, valued, and supported. Through 'Building Flourishing Futures', our aim is to create a platform for learning exchange for educators to share ideas, insights and best practices on creating inclusive learning ecosystems that enable every child to flourish," as per the press release.

Built on learning and engagement from the previous edition that explored the transformative role of early childhood education in community development, 'Building Flourishing Futures 2026', expanded the lens to primary education, with a continuum of learning perspectives across early years and foundational learning.

Key international speakers included Dr Rebecca Rolland from Harvard University, Prof Marilyn Fleer and Dr Prabhat Rai from Monash University, Ms Fiona Carter, International Director, Wellington College, UK, Dr Rita Chawla-Duggan, Lecturer, Early Childhood Studies, Bath University, UK, Ms Beatrice Moccia, Head of Primary, Raoul Wallenberg International School, Spain.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Great to see Indian philanthropy leading the conversation in education. While the event looks fantastic, I hope the insights and "best practices" discussed actually trickle down to the grassroots level and aren't just confined to elite circles. The real test is implementation in rural Anganwadis.
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Arjun K
"Meeting learners where they are" – this phrase really resonates. Our one-size-fits-all education system often fails children from diverse backgrounds. Need more such discussions that blend global expertise with Indian context. Kudos to the team for organising.
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Sarah B
As an educator working in Delhi, the line about children flourishing when they feel "cared for, warm, safe, valued" is the absolute core truth. Academic pressure starts so early now. This holistic focus is a welcome change. Hope the session recordings are shared publicly!
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Vikram M
Impressive speaker lineup with experts from Harvard and Monash. The continuum from early childhood to primary education is key. Often the transition is too abrupt for kids. If foundations like Reliance can pilot models based on this, it could be a game-changer for our NEP 2020 goals.
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Kavya N
Heartening to see this. But a small note – while international insights are valuable, I hope equal weight was given to indigenous Indian pedagogical practices and our own educationists. Our gurukul system had much of this "holistic" approach figured out centuries ago. Balance is important.

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