Xseed education

XSEED Education
Private company
Industry Education
Founder Ashish Rajpal
Products XSEED Future and XSEED Five Step Edition, Tapp Mobile App
Number of employees
350 (2014–15)[1]
Website xseededucation.com

XSEED Education is an Education company headquartered in Singapore, founded by Ashish Rajpal.

[2] XSEED is a proven and research based academic program for schools that builds thinking skills & problem solving confidence in children. XSEED children ask more questions, can write in their own words, like doing word problems in mathematics, can complete their homework on their own, are not afraid to speak-up in English, persist longer in solving problems, and score well on tests.

Xseed education is practiced in an estimated 2000 schools across the nation, serving children from birth to thireen years old. Xseed education serves over 1,000,000 children.[3] XSEED Living Knowledge System is an integrated curriculum, teacher training and assessment program for K-8 schools.

Overview

The XSEED 5-step experiential learning approach was designed in 2008 after over five years of research by alumni from Harvard, Cambridge, MIT and IIM Ahmedabad.[4] The Xseed education approach was especially developed to align with existing international standards and syllabus of various boards, including the CBSE and ICSE education boards of India. In the classroom, XSEED replaces the one-step telling approach with a multi-step learning process since children learn best by action, followed by reflection and feedback.

XSEED Living Knowledge System has been implemented by 2000 schools across India, Singapore, Dubai, Riyadh, Qatar and Oman. XSEED has also partnered with the Royal Education Council Bhutan.

References

  1. XSEED Education No. of Employees
  2. "In small towns, teachers embrace a new script". June 2015. businessstandard.com. Retrieved 29 June 2015.
  3. "iDiscoveri unveils the ‘Child of Tomorrow’ workshop". 10 February 2011. Presstrust.com. Retrieved 21 October 2011.
  4. "The Head Master". India Today. 16 July 2011. Retrieved 18 November 2011.

External links


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