BHUMI (organisation)
This article contains content that is written like an advertisement. (March 2018) |
Founded | 2006 |
---|---|
Founder | , , |
Type | volunteering |
Focus | Education, Civic engagement, environment, social entrepreneurship |
Location | |
Area served | Bengaluru, Chandigarh, Chennai, Coimbatore, Delhi, Hyderabad, Jaipur, Kolkata, Mumbai, Pune, Thanjavur, Tiruchirappalli, India |
Website | www |
Bhumi is one of India's largest independent youth volunteer non-profit organisations.[1] Bhumi as a platform enables over 30,000 volunteers in more than 12 cities across India for causes like education, environment, animals, community welfare etc.[2] Bhumi helps educate over 25,000 children across India[3] as of 2020.
Bhumi capitalises on the volunteering force of Indian youth, playing a catalyst directing India and the youth towards a better tomorrow.[1] Bhumi has established itself as a front-ranking charity organisation that helps poor children to realise their potential, raise their aspirations and recognise their achievements in various fields.[4] Bhumi is one of the top 20 NGOs to work, intern & volunteer for in India[5]
Bhumi is also the winner of the ‘Leader in Volunteer Engagement Award 2013’ at the iVolunteer Awards.[6]
History[]
Bhumi was started in 2006[7] by a few students and young professionals in the Indian city of Chennai. The organisation was started by ophthalmologist Dr. Prahalathan KK and his friends Ayyanar Elumalai, Dr. Harishankar, Namasivayam and Prakash Selvaraj.[7] With a passion to do something for the nation, a bunch of young people got together to volunteer to teach children at an orphanage in Chennai. The experience was an eye-opener about the status of the education system in the country. This motivated the co-founders to start Bhumi on August 15, 2006.[8] They started a branch in Tiruchi in 2009 with few students from Saranathan College of Engineering and by 2015 the volunteer strength crossed over to 500 students covering all colleges in and around city.[7] By 2016,the NGO was active in 12 cities and was working with over 15,000 children across India.[7]
Approach[]
BHUMI Volunteers are primarily college students and young professional working voluntarily to provide education support in children's homes and community centres.[9][10] The methodology of teaching is mostly informal which incorporates the idea of "learn while you play". In 2016,the organisation team in Tiruchi was designing academic and non-academic programmes for children living in as many as 40 orphanages and around 600 children were tutored by its volunteers over the weekend in Computer Science, English, Mathematics and Science and nearly 1,200 kids participated in the annual talent show called ‘Nakshatra’.[7] The NGO had also designed a mentorship project for its volunteers called "Lakshya",imparting leadership and social skills and each volunteer spends two hours on teaching, and two hours on project preparation every week.[7] The volunteer team tries to get the orphanage children involved in events like Nakshatra to help them know more about happenings in the world and promotes them to take up higher education or become financially independent after school and the organisation had designed a syllabus which runs parallel to the formal school curriculum with exception being it is interactive and teachers are called ‘Anna’ or ‘Akka’, and one volunteer being assigned for every four students for adequate individual attention and its mandatory for aspiring volunteers to be below the age of 30 years.[7]
Programmes[]
Bhumi has two core areas of work - Education and Civic Projects
Ignite: Transformational Education[]
Ignite is Bhumi's supplementary education programme for under-privileged children. The programme is delivered during the weekends by trained volunteers of Bhumi. Over 25,000 children are benefiting from the programme as of 2020.[3] The programme consists of English, Mathematics, Science, computers, mentoring, arts, sports and life skills support.[1]
Kanini[]
Kanini meaning computer in some Indian languages including Tamil, is Bhumi's computer literacy programme for children. Kanini has a well-structured syllabus with courses that cater to children's varying requirements, interests and aptitudes. The basic course package consists of introduction to the Computer, basic software and hardware, Microsoft Office tools and the Internet.
Speak Out[]
The Speak Out programme provides quality English and soft-skills education to underprivileged children. The programme builds the communication ability and confidence of children so that they can stand at par with the rest of the world.
Lakshya[]
Lakshya is a mentorship programme which pairs underprivileged children with volunteers who act as their mentors and role models. Mentors meet mentees every week and assist them with school work, listen to their problems and support them in challenges they encounter. In the process, mentors instill self-confidence and the ability to solve one's own problem in the children.
e-Lakshya[]
e-Lakshya is a mentorship programme which pairs underprivileged children in rural India with Bhumi volunteers across the world who act as their mentors and role models. Mentors interact with mentees through the internet at Bhumi facilitated sessions.
Little Einsteins - Mathematics[]
Little Einsteins - Mathematics is an activity based learning programme that focuses on the conceptual understanding and learning. The programme taps the curiosity of children and eliminates the fear of the subject by widening the spectrum of their knowledge.
Little Einsteins - Science[]
Little Einsteins -Science is an experiment based programme that teaches the fundamental concepts of science through experimentation, observation and conceptual understanding. The programme helps students understand concepts by doing experiments and helps eliminate the fear of Science.
Yantra[]
Yantra is an exciting hands-on programme that helps children learn scientific concepts by building their own robots. The programme helps children develop interest in the STEM fields (Science, Technology, Engineering & Mathematics)[11][12]
Nakshatra[]
Nakshatra, is Bhumi's talent development programme. Nakshatra consists of an Annual inter-orphanage art, sports and science talent Fest to bring out the children's creative talents held across India[13][14] and a year long talent development programme in arts, sports at shelter homes. The event has been held annually since 2009[15] [16] .[17] Over 6,000 children participate in Nakshatra every year[18]
Nakshatra, is a two-day talent fest held every year has an array of competitive activities to ensure that children of all age groups from orphanages participate and gain immensely by competing against their peers. The 50 different arts and cultural competitions- including flower arrangement, pot painting, clay modelling, elocution, solo / group dance and song etc. and athletic and sporting competitions like sprint, high jump, shot put, volleyball, chess etc. are structured for various age groups to facilitate maximum participation. The event is peppered with entertainment, games and a science exhibition to keep the children busy even while they were not competing.
Catalyse: Transforming Citizenry[]
Catalyse consists of Bhumi's civic projects that engage volunteers in causes like animal welfare, community welfare, disability,[19] environment,[20] health etc. The programmes consisting of one-off and regular volunteering activities engage over 5,000 volunteers each year in over 15 cities across India.
De Step[]
The project started in 2020 during Covid Pandemic is aimed at nurturing the potential of lesser-privileged children through dance — is a way to recognise the skills of dancers across the country for a cause and this social project will be curating a nation-wide online dance competition titled Lockdown Showdown 2020.[21] The dance competition had two categories — self-taught dancers and professional dancers, and three age-wise sub-categories — those below 18; above 36, and those between ages 18 and 36. The submissions under the self-taught dancer's category had been posted to Bhumi's official TikTok account and the winners were chosen based on the number of likes their videos received and A special jury was also constituted to evaluate the performances and similarly the professional dancer's entries were shortlisted and shared on Bhumi's Instagram account and the winners were selected by a special panel and also a registration fee was collected from the participants the proceeds of which were donated towards Bhumi's COVID-19 relief activities. The registration for self-taught dancers was fixed at Rs 99 and for professionals was Rs 249.[21] Following rules were fixed for competition:[21]
1.Each participant were allowed to post only one video.
2.Time limit of the dance video was fixed less than 60 seconds.
3.The participants were asked to ensure good quality video and audio are posted and no video editing or after-effects were allowed.
4.It was ensured that the video was original and filmed during the quarantine period.
Clean India in partnership with TikTok[]
In 2019,TikTok app had partnered with NGO Bhumi and launched the "CleanIndia" challenge which trended on it with more than 750 million views and to spread the challenge and rope in greater number of TikTok users as part of the campaign,Bhumi initiated cleanliness drives in other Indian cities too.
Corporate Social Responsibility[]
Bhumi Supports the Corporate Social Responsibility initiatives of companies like Cognizant Technological Solutions, Dassault Systemes[22] etc.
Awards[]
- Bhumi is the recipient of the ‘Leader in Volunteer Engagement Award 2013’ at the iVolunteer Awards.[6]
- Bhumi is the recipient of the 'Excellence in Literacy' Award 2009 from the Rotary Club.
- Bhumi is the recipient of the 'InDiya Shine Award' 2009 from Great Non Profits International.
- Bhumi is the recipient of the ‘Service Excellence’ Award 2010 from the Rotary Club.
- Vaishnavi Srinivasan, a Bhumi Volunteer has won the Youth Volunteer of the Year Award at the Apeejay India Volunteer Awards 2011.
- Bhumi is the recipient of the ‘award for excellence in the field of education’ 2013 from the Rotary Club[9]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c "Benefiting Over 10,000 Children Every Year, This Team Shows Us The Power Of Volunteering". The Better India. 28 March 2014. Retrieved 15 April 2015.
- ^ "Bhumi". India Cares Foundation. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
- ^ Jump up to: a b https://www.news18.com/news/india/no-country-for-them-orphans-child-labourers-invisible-uncounted-collateral-victims-of-covid-19-crisis-2618229.html
- ^ NXG (2010). "Give them wings". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 2010-12-20.
- ^ Team, CareerNinja (31 October 2018). "20 Best NGOs in India To Work For". CareerNinja. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Abhishek Bachchan Lauds Bhumi". The New Indian Express. 27 March 2014. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Nainar, Nahla (4 September 2015). "Teaching and learning". The Hindu. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
- ^ "To establish an institution that makes meaningful impact on society requires years of hard work and dedication – Dr. Prahalathan/ Bhumi". Stagephod. Archived from the original on 25 April 2015. Retrieved 25 April 2015.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "The league of extraordinary humans". The New Indian Express. 30 March 2013. Retrieved 28 February 2015.
- ^ Education Plus (23 August 2010). "Serve to Succeed". The Hindu. Chennai, India.
- ^ "Robotics is no rocket science". The Hindu. 1 February 2015. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
- ^ "Children from Chennai orphanages make robots at robotics workshop". The Times of India. 31 January 2015. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
- ^ "Children showcase creative side". The Hindu. 20 August 2012. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
- ^ "Earnest show of talent". The Hindu. 13 August 2012. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
- ^ "When talent takes wing". The Hindu. 27 July 2010. Archived from the original on 14 November 2010. Retrieved 9 May 2012.
- ^ "Bhumi's Siragugal '10". Chennai Online. 27 July 2010. Archived from the original on 15 July 2010. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
- ^ "Celebrating the creative spirit". The Hindu. 14 July 2011. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
- ^ "Children bring house down at Nakshatra". The Hindu. 20 July 2014. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
- ^ "Giving is Growing". The New Indian Express. 18 January 2015. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
- ^ "The joy of cleaning Chennai beaches". The New Indian Express. 7 October 2013. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c "Let's have a Lockdown Showdown!". 21 May 2020. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
- ^ "NASSCOM Foundation guides Dassault Systemes towards volunteerism". India CSR. 2010.[permanent dead link]
External links[]
- Educational organisations based in India
- Children's charities based in India
- Educational charities
- Non-profit organisations based in India
- Organizations established in 2006