Inspirational Leadership: The Power of Restraint
The Bishops School Pune / The Millennium school Dubai/ Allahabad/ Pune /Dubai United Arab Emirates/ Some amusing posts- just my opinion /
Tuesday, 26 August 2025
Inspirational leadership
Monday, 25 August 2025
Where are weddings made
Four Decades of Marriage: From That Rainy Day in Allahabad
Friday, 22 August 2025
Rethinking Success
“Rethinking Success: Why Balance Matters More Than Being First”
Fast Lane Childhood
Think back to when you were growing up. You were probably told to speak up, lead from the front, never lag behind, get to the top—or be first—or be forgotten. It started with your parents, who seemed to have an instinctive radar for ambition, quickly picked up by teachers, and soon the whole extended family joined in: uncles, aunts, grandparents—everyone had advice, everyone had expectations. And if you were an Indian child, your parents would announce to anyone who would listen how brilliantly you spoke, wrote, scored, or played chess. You didn’t even need to be in the room—your brilliance had a life of its own.
Mental Health and Pressure
This obsession with speed has crept into education too. We celebrate toppers and gold medallists—but what about the rest? Nearly one in seven adolescents worldwide struggles with mental health issues, often worsened by academic and social pressures. We speak too often of winners, and too rarely of worth.
“Mental health” and “wellbeing” are now fashionable buzzwords. But how much has really changed? Conferences and wellness committees are easy; reducing the pressure that makes them necessary is harder. What we need is a societal awakening—a choice to value balance as much as brilliance, fulfilment as much as first place.
Patience Pays
But the older I get, the more I realise that history often belongs to those who took their time. Mandela waited 27 years behind prison walls and emerged with the patience to reconcile, not retaliate. Gandhi moved at the pace of the slowest villager, yet shook the foundations of an empire. Lincoln was accused of being too slow, yet his careful choices preserved a fragile union.
Rushing Leaders
Compare that with some present-day leaders—again, no names needed. Always rushing from summit to summit, posing for photos, issuing urgent declarations that expire before lunch, and tweeting policies into existence before breakfast. They seem to equate motion with progress. In reality, they leave behind press releases, hashtags, and baffled citizens wondering what was actually achieved.
Awards and Trophies
Awards are everywhere—The Most Inspiring Leader, Visionary Extraordinaire, and so on. Many are little more than business models: pay, nominate yourself, and presto—a certificate, shield, or shiny cup. I have never received one myself, but that is not the point. Does every child or adult really need a trophy? When everyone is rewarded, rewards lose their meaning. Some are genuinely well-deserved, but many exist simply to glitter on a shelf. Perhaps it is time to rethink what we are truly rewarding—and why.
Redefining Success
I was never a topper. Rarely in front, rarely leading the pack. Yet today, I consider myself successful—not because of medals, but because I have found purpose, balance, and a life I value. Success, I have learned, is not always about being first; it is about being fulfilled.
Drive and ambition matter. But so does perspective. Balance. Wellbeing.
The tortoise, after all, did not hurry—but it reached the finish line just the same.
So the real question for all of us—educators, leaders, parents, and young people alike—is this: in our desperate race to be first, are we forgetting what it really means to be successful? Because history rarely remembers who ran fastest. It remembers who mattered.
Thursday, 21 August 2025
Are Our Schools Ready for AI
Excitement alone won’t improve learning — preparation and purpose will.
AI is coming to schools, but the real challenge is turning its potential into meaningful impact for teachers and students.
Every school wants in, but one crucial question is often overlooked: are our teachers truly ready? You cannot rely on a single passionate AI enthusiast and hope everything will work out. Teachers need proper training, ongoing support, and a clear understanding of how AI tools can enhance their teaching. Without this, even the most sophisticated software risks being underused.
The UAE, to its credit, is not merely following this global tide — it is leading it. The UAE AI Strategy 2031 is bold: to build a knowledge-based, innovation-driven society where AI improves quality of life and ensures competitiveness. Education sits at the heart of this vision.
Yet in schools, it is easy to mistake excitement for progress. Glossy announcements and flashy tools can overshadow the harder work of embedding technology in ways that truly matter.
AI in education should focus on three things — improving learning outcomes, supporting teacher effectiveness, and enabling smarter leadership decisions. When software tracks a student’s progress and pinpoints where support is needed, that’s powerful. When teachers use AI insights to tailor lessons instead of guessing, that’s progress. When school leaders make resource decisions based on data, that’s transformation. The real gain is giving teachers sharper insights so they can do what they do best: teach.
Chasing expensive showpieces is a distraction. What works is simpler: small, well-planned pilots, comprehensive teacher training, and clear feedback to measure real impact. Schools that succeed will treat AI as an enabler in the background, quietly supporting better teaching and learning.
Many UAE schools recognised this early. Leading operators have made AI a priority, and we are seeing encouraging steps in the right direction. But big questions remain: How much AI is enough? What happens next? Where will AI in classrooms realistically be five years from now? And how will we equip teachers to use these tools effectively?
These are not questions for policymakers alone. Parents need to understand how AI is shaping their children’s education. Teachers must learn to use these tools while preserving the human connection that defines great teaching. School leaders must balance innovation with practical wisdom, ensuring technology serves real learning goals.
The UAE has an advantage. Regulators are ahead of the curve, supporting innovation while insisting on safety, ethics, and accountability. This balance of ambition with careful guidance sets the stage for AI in education to grow in meaningful, sustainable ways.
AI in schools will succeed when we focus on meaningful change rather than chasing shiny tools. The key questions remain: Are our teachers ready? Are students learning better? Are we using technology wisely to enhance education? It’s time to equip teachers, support students, and make AI truly count in classrooms.
Tuesday, 19 August 2025
Society must not forget it's Teachers
Society must not forget it's TEACHERS
In a world of rapid change and information overload, teachers remain the true architects of learning, innovation, and social progress.
Looking back on my school years in Allahabad, I remember a few teachers who left a lasting mark—not just for the lessons they taught, but for the way they taught them. Some were strict, disciplined, and passionate about ensuring no pupil was left behind, while others were cheerful, approachable, and inspiring in their own gentle way. Later, as a young teacher at The Bishop’s School, Pune, I observed senior colleagues who guided and mentored me, showing me both what to do and what not to do in the classroom. Those early experiences shaped my understanding of teaching: it is as much about character, empathy, and patience as it is about knowledge.
Over the past 25 years in the UAE with GEMS Education, one of the largest providers of private schooling in the region, I have seen firsthand how high the standards of education are here. Parents have real choices and demand the best for their children, regulators like KHDA, ADEK, and SPEA continuously raise the bar, and students are advanced, aware, well-read, and well-traveled. The UAE is a country that moves education forward at remarkable speed, making it a vibrant place for learning.
Yet the challenges for teachers remain immense. Today’s educators are not just conveyors of facts—they must be role models, mentors, counselors, administrators, tech experts, and sometimes even part-time parents. They need to adapt to each student’s unique learning style, nurture curiosity, and prepare learners to think critically, creatively, and independently. The classroom is no longer a one-way street of rote learning; it is a space for collaboration, exploration, and innovation.
While I often look back fondly on the teachers who influenced me, I also recognize a worrying trend: fewer young people seem eager to take up teaching as a profession. In countries like Finland, Singapore, and South Korea, teachers are highly respected and among the best-paid professionals, and this reflects in the quality of education and societal progress. We need a rethink and reform in how we value teaching. Teachers must be restored to their rightful place as gurus—the guides who shape not just individual students but the very future of society.
It is not rocket science. If we want a society capable of innovation, compassion, and real change, we need to go back to the grass roots. We must understand why respect for teaching has diminished and why fewer young people aspire to it. Teachers are the foundation of every other profession; engineers, doctors, scientists, and artists all begin as students under their guidance. Without investing in teachers—through respect, resources, and incentives—we risk eroding the very fabric of progress.
Effective teachers are fluid, adaptive, and deeply human. They inspire curiosity, encourage questions, and nurture resilience. And while technology can enhance learning, it cannot replace the subtle art of guidance, encouragement, and mentorship that a teacher provides. Perhaps the only formula society really needs is simple: value teachers, invest in them, and trust them to mold the future.
After all, as any good teacher will tell you—with a twinkle in their eye—teaching is the only profession where you can shape the world without ever leaving the classroom.
Monday, 18 August 2025
Libraries
Dusty Shelves, Bright Minds: My Life Among Libraries
Some say libraries are dying; I say they’re just getting quieter, while slyly plotting their comeback!
My earliest memory of a library goes back to St Joseph’s, Allahabad – I was probably in Grade 6. There was a proper, central library, and within it, two or three cupboards were allocated to each grade. A serious looking Librarian sat in one corner. From those shelves, I devoured every Enid Blyton book I could find. There was also a thrilling series called Biggles, which convinced me I might one day fly secret missions over enemy territory. And of course, Secret Seven must take some responsibility for several earnest, if slightly misguided, crime-fighting adventures in the school corridors.
Then came The Boy’s High school – also in Allahabad - Grade 8 onwards, with its dusty, upstairs library. It was a large room but rather run down and forgotten … though more mischief happened there than serious reading. Books fell, paper planes soared, fights broke out and football was played.
I then moved to teach in The Bishop’s School, Pune. The library there offered a large, bright, airy sanctuary. Staff and boys flocked to the library to read the newspapers and books, plan which movie to see (and the staff to work out details and odds for the afternoon Horse racing on the Pune racecourse! Getting a look in on weekends was a difficult proposition.
I remember less about the novels and far more about the encyclopedias: Encyclopedia Britannica, World Book Encyclopedia, and The New Book of Knowledge. I spent hours poring over them, researching Shakespeare’s plays and poems which I taught to Grade nine and ten, long before Google made it effortless. Boys were smart and I was always determined to be one step ahead.
Then Google arrived. Slowly, quietly, it changed everything. Over the past decade, library usage has dropped by roughly a third, as instant access to information replaced the ritual of wandering shelves.
Yet, libraries are far from obsolete. Many people still maintain home libraries, surrounding themselves with books for comfort, curiosity, and the joy of discovery.
Reading remains one of the most wonderful, thought slightly underestimated pastimes. It entertains, sharpens the mind, broadens perspectives, and keeps one alert and thoughtful.
Will libraries ever be fully replaced? I doubt it. They are more than just repositories of information; they are spaces that nurture imagination, cultivate wisdom, and quietly demand focus in a noisy world. There is something sacred about a good Library, which is indescribable.
For those of us who grew up among Blyton’s, Biggles, and dusty encyclopedias, libraries will always remain sacred places – cathedrals of thought, knowledge, and yes, a little mischievous fun too.
Friday, 15 August 2025
______Why dressing well matters __________________________________