
9-Year-Old Builds Robots, Invests in SIPs Without School
Vedarth doesn't attend traditional school, but at nine years old he's already read 100 books, builds robots, runs cupcake stalls, and invests his savings through SIPs. His mother Vrishuti chose unschooling to let curiosity guide his education instead of textbooks.
While most kids his age are sitting in rows reciting times tables, nine-year-old Vedarth is designing robots, managing his own small business, and learning how money grows through investments.
His classroom isn't bound by four walls. Some mornings he's sketching prototypes for his next robot build. Other days he's running a cupcake stall in his courtyard, chatting with customers and counting earnings.
Vedarth has already read over 100 books on topics that fascinate him. He attends robotics workshops, tackles LEGO engineering challenges, and picks up life skills as naturally as other children memorize spelling lists.
His entrepreneurial ventures have earned him nearly 10,000 rupees over the years. With his mother's guidance, he's invested those savings in SIPs, learning about patience, compound growth, and financial planning before most kids understand pocket money.
Behind this journey is his mother Vrishuti, an architect who questioned her own conventional education. She realized that memorizing formulas rarely served her in real life, so she chose a different path for Vedarth called unschooling, where learning follows interest instead of syllabus.

Every morning, mother and son plan a flexible day together. Each night, they sit down with two simple questions: "What did you learn today?" and "What didn't work, and why?" For nine years, this cycle of reflection has shaped how Vedarth discovers the world.
The results speak for themselves. Vedarth has won two gold medals and one silver medal in tennis. He's now preparing to publish his first book, written entirely on his own terms and timeline.
Why This Inspires
Vedarth's story challenges the idea that learning only happens in traditional classrooms. His education isn't measured in test scores but in tangible skills: building things that work, managing money that grows, and developing curiosity that never stops asking questions.
Today, Vedarth and Vrishuti run unschooling workshops for other families exploring alternative education paths. They're sharing what nine years of real-world learning has taught them about trust, patience, and letting children follow their natural interests.
For families wondering if there's another way to raise curious, capable kids, Vedarth's journey offers a bright answer.
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Based on reporting by The Better India
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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