Bihar to Harvard: How This Indian Teacher Taught at Malala Yousafzai’s School & in 18 Countries

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The Architect of Hope: How One Teacher’s Journey is Rebuilding Classrooms — and Dreams — Around the World

In the ruins of Mosul, where echoes of war still linger like dust in the air, a young boy named Woleed once shared a dream that stopped a man in his tracks.

“What do you want to grow up to be?” Satyam Mishra had asked, expecting a familiar answer. He was used to hearing “doctor” — the archetypal dream of children growing up in conflict zones. But Woleed, a child of war with a soul older than his years, gave a different reply.

“I want to be an architect.”

Satyam leaned in, curious. “And what will you build?”

“My city of Mosul,” came the quiet but firm answer. “I will rebuild my city.”

That moment — so powerful it still gives him goosebumps — crystallized something for Satyam: War can tear down cities, families, and futures. But hope? Hope plants itself in the rubble and waits for hands like Woleed’s to rebuild.

Bihar to Harvard: How This Indian Teacher Taught at Malala Yousafzai’s School & in 18 Countries

Years have passed since that conversation, but the embers of it still burn within Satyam. Today, at 34, he stands at the confluence of vision and purpose, chasing a dream that has taken him across continents — not as a soldier or a savior, but as a teacher. Or more precisely, a teacher of teachers.

From Bhagalpur to Harvard — and Beyond

Satyam’s own story begins in Bhagalpur, Bihar — once famed for its silk, but scarred by the 1989 communal riots. In a city stitched with the trauma of division, Satyam found his first lesson in resilience.

Bihar to Harvard: How This Indian Teacher Taught at Malala Yousafzai’s School & in 18 Countries

His earliest student? His grandmother. At just seven, Satyam realized she wasn’t quizzing him for fun — she couldn’t read or write. And so, with crayons in hand and cartoons in the background, a boy began teaching a 72-year-old woman how to read the newspaper. When she finally wrote her name, there were sweets in the house — and a quiet revolution in Satyam’s heart.

That sense of purpose never left him. Though he studied engineering, it was the classroom that called him — not the corporate boardroom. He joined Teach For India and quickly earned the nickname “Maths Baba” from his ninth-grade students in Pune. He made math magical. Even the school helper, Jaymala Pawar, found herself attempting board exams she’d once feared — and aced math on her first try, thanks to Satyam.

Teaching: Not Just a Profession, But a Passport

From dusty classrooms in Pune to refugee camps in Lebanon, Satyam’s chalk-stained journey has been nothing short of a global odyssey. During a stint with Teach For Ethiopia, he helped draft a child protection policy that banned corporal punishment in 17 schools — a reform long overdue, and desperately needed.

Bihar to Harvard: How This Indian Teacher Taught at Malala Yousafzai’s School & in 18 Countries

In 2017, he was invited to teach at the Malala Yousafzai All Girls’ School in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley — a school for teenage girls displaced by the Syrian crisis. “It was my first time teaching in a conflict zone,” he recalls. “But the calm and resilience there… it humbled me.”

Bihar to Harvard: How This Indian Teacher Taught at Malala Yousafzai’s School & in 18 Countries

He didn’t speak Arabic. But that wasn’t a problem. Malala’s own translator stepped in, and suddenly, Satyam was living a chapter of a book he’d once read, only this time, he was part of the plot.

Teacher Training: The Global Game-Changer

Over the last decade, Satyam has trained teachers across 18 countries — from Nepal to Nigeria, South Africa to Slovakia. What drives him is a singular conviction: “If we want to reach every child on the planet, teacher training is the way forward.”

Bihar to Harvard: How This Indian Teacher Taught at Malala Yousafzai’s School & in 18 Countries

And he’s not wrong. The world needs 69 million more teachers by 2030 to achieve universal basic education. But teaching, long undervalued and overburdened, is facing a quiet crisis. Countries are struggling to hire and retain educators, especially in underserved regions.

Satyam wants to change that — starting in the heart of eastern India.

In May 2025, after graduating from Harvard with a degree in education leadership, he’ll return home with a plan to strengthen teaching in Bihar and Jharkhand — states where systemic neglect, poverty, and apathy have taken a heavy toll on learning. In Jharkhand alone, a third of all primary schools operate with just one teacher. In Bihar, school attendance in some areas barely scrapes 20 percent.

Bihar to Harvard: How This Indian Teacher Taught at Malala Yousafzai’s School & in 18 Countries

But Satyam isn’t disheartened. He’s energized. “Even teachers who may never leave their villages deserve access to the best teaching practices in the world,” he says. “And we can bring that to them.”

Through innovative training models, cultural context, and a heavy dose of empathy, Satyam’s mission is clear: build classrooms where both teachers and students feel seen, empowered, and equipped.

The Power of Belief

It hasn’t always been easy. In Bhagalpur, when Satyam first deviated from a conventional career path, the neighbors didn’t get it.

Bihar to Harvard: How This Indian Teacher Taught at Malala Yousafzai’s School & in 18 Countries

“Yeh kar kya raha hai?” (“What is he even doing?”) they would murmur.

Then, in 2021, he was shortlisted for the Global Teacher Prize — the one with the million-dollar reward. Suddenly, the question was asked again, but this time, with awe. “Yeh kar kya raha hai?!

Ah, the power of perception.

Bihar to Harvard: How This Indian Teacher Taught at Malala Yousafzai’s School & in 18 Countries

But Satyam never did it for the applause. He did it because he believed — and still believes — in education as the great equalizer. At Harvard, where he was awarded an 83% scholarship, he’s learning how to take quality education to the most remote corners of the world.

He often says: “If I can do it, so can you.”

Bihar to Harvard: How This Indian Teacher Taught at Malala Yousafzai’s School & in 18 Countries

And that’s not just a line. It’s a lifeline for children like Woleed, who are dreaming in the rubble. It’s a spark for teachers like Jaymala, who are rediscovering math. It’s a promise for grandmothers who want to read the newspaper.

In the story of education, Satyam Mishra is both narrator and architect — building not just classrooms, but futures.

And like any good teacher, he insists: This is just the beginning.