‘Grow With Grace – Feel Safe, Valued’ Features Live Realities of Schools…

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In an educational landscape often dominated by policy language, targets, and compliance structures, Grow With Grace – Feel Safe, Valued written by versatile educationist Gajendra Singh Rathore emerges as a deeply human and experience-driven work. This book is not written from a distance; it is written from within the lived realities of schools. Through a series of short yet powerful articles, it captures the subtle, often unnoticed dynamics of classrooms and staffrooms, and transforms them into meaningful insights for teachers and school leaders.

What distinguishes this book is its grounding in real institutional challenges. The opening articles immediately set the tone by addressing one of the most persistent issues in schools—lack of alignment among teachers. In the article on building a team through a “fusion process,” the author draws a compelling parallel with nuclear fusion, suggesting that when individuals come together with shared purpose and emotional connection, they generate immense collective energy. This is not presented as abstract theory but as a practical leadership insight: schools do not improve through isolated excellence, but through unified effort.

As the book progresses, it turns its attention to disengagement. In the article “I am Ennui!”, the author gives a name to the quiet stagnation present in many schools, where meetings happen and plans are made, but enthusiasm and ownership remain absent. Instead of blaming individuals, the article diagnoses the systemic gap between instruction and participation. The suggested intervention—creating “huddle spaces” and using role-play to co-construct agreements—demonstrates the book’s consistent approach: every problem must lead to a practical, participatory solution.

A particularly powerful contribution lies in its treatment of parental engagement through the article “Turning PTMs into Growth Engines.” Here, Parent-Teacher Meetings are reimagined as strategic platforms for transformation rather than routine formalities. Similarly, the discussion on establishing an effective reward system highlights that teacher motivation is central to school success, reinforcing that institutional excellence depends on nurturing educators through recognition and trust.

The book also aligns with contemporary priorities such as the National Education Policy 2020, emphasizing 21st-century skills like Critical Thinking, Creativity, Collaboration, and Communication. It remains grounded in classroom realities, treating these not as abstract goals but as natural outcomes of thoughtful teaching.

Another strength is its focus on observation and micro-level understanding of classroom behavior. The idea that “an action plan should also be made to contemplate the whole at a micro level” captures the essence of responsive teaching. Leadership insights such as “To be trusted is a greater compliment than to be loved” further underline the importance of trust as the foundation of school culture.

Underlying all the articles is a unifying philosophy—that learning flourishes only when individuals feel safe and valued. The book ultimately serves both as a practical guide and a reflective mirror for educators. It offers clarity to teachers, direction to leaders, and a powerful reminder that meaningful change begins with small, consistent actions.

It is also important to recognize the author, Gajendra Singh Rathore, as an emerging international educator from Ratlam, whose work bridges grassroots classroom realities with globally relevant educational thinking. His ability to translate local experiences into universal insights makes this book significant not only regionally but globally.