Young girls in rural India tending to vegetable crops at agriculture school

India's First Girls-Only Farm School Now Teaching 65+

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In a small Uttar Pradesh village, daughters of farmers are learning to grow purple cabbage and broccoli while mastering computers and modern agriculture. What started under a tree with 6 girls has blossomed into a movement proving rural girls can lead India's farming future.

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When Ashita Nath gathered six girls under a tree in her Uttar Pradesh village, neighbors wondered why farmers' daughters needed school at all. Today, 65 students are proving them beautifully wrong.

The Good Harvest School is India's first agriculture school designed specifically for girls. Here, young women don't just memorize textbooks. They get their hands dirty planting broccoli and purple cabbage crops rarely seen in Indian villages.

Between rows of vegetables, these students also tackle English lessons, mathematics, and computer skills. The curriculum blends traditional farming wisdom with modern techniques, creating a generation of scientifically trained female farmers.

The transformation goes deeper than crops. Girls who once stayed home now confidently discuss soil chemistry and crop rotation. Parents who doubted education now watch their daughters become village experts.

Starting a school under a tree wasn't Nath's backup plan. It was her bold statement that education doesn't need fancy buildings to change lives. From that humble beginning, classrooms eventually followed as the community saw results.

India's First Girls-Only Farm School Now Teaching 65+

The students aren't just learning for themselves. Many return home each day to share new farming techniques with their families. One girl's knowledge about organic pest control can improve an entire household's harvest.

The Ripple Effect

This single school is quietly rewriting what's possible for rural Indian girls. In communities where daughters traditionally had few options beyond marriage, these students are becoming agricultural innovators and future leaders.

The confidence shift ripples outward. When one girl masters computer skills or successfully grows a new crop variety, it changes what her younger sisters believe they can achieve. Village attitudes about girls' education are softening with every successful harvest.

The model proves scalable too. What works under one tree in Uttar Pradesh could work in thousands of villages across India where farming families need both agricultural innovation and gender equality.

Ashita Nath didn't just start a school. She planted seeds of possibility that are growing faster than any crop.

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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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