
Parents Teach Kids Cooking, Budgeting as Real Life Skills
Forget worksheets. Parents across India are turning roadside stalls, kitchens, and everyday moments into classrooms where kids learn money management, cooking, and confidence through real experiences.
What if the best classroom wasn't a classroom at all? Families across India are proving that life's most valuable lessons happen when kids get their hands dirty, not when they memorize facts.
Take Cheenee Mehta from Udaipur. She turned a roadside chikki stall into her son's business school, where he counts change, greets customers, and learns what responsibility feels like in real time.
No textbook can teach what happens when you hand a child actual coins and actual strangers. The confidence her son gains from each transaction builds something no test score can measure.
Meanwhile, Harpreet Grover discovered that just five minutes of focused attention on his child's interests creates more learning than hours of forced study. He guides curiosity instead of controlling it, letting questions lead the way.
Seven-year-old Agniv doesn't follow a rigid timetable. He cooks simple meals, builds robots, and explores whatever catches his imagination that day. His parents transform ordinary moments into adventures by simply asking "what if?" instead of "sit down and memorize this."

Then there's nine-year-old Vedarth, who runs cupcake stalls, builds robots, and even learns about SIP investments. His family practices unschooling, where interests shape the curriculum and real experiences replace standardized tests.
These kids aren't just playing. They're developing problem-solving skills, financial literacy, and independence that traditional education often misses.
Why This Inspires
These parents aren't waiting for schools to teach life skills. They're creating learning laboratories in their own homes and neighborhoods, proving that education happens everywhere when adults trust kids to explore.
The beauty lies in the simplicity: a candy stall becomes economics class, a kitchen becomes chemistry lab, curiosity becomes the curriculum. No fancy programs or expensive tools required, just patient adults willing to let children learn by doing.
What these families share isn't a teaching method but a mindset. They support exploration, guide gently, and stand beside their kids as they experiment, fail, adjust, and grow stronger.
The result? Kids who don't just know facts but understand how the world actually works, one chikki sale and one robot at a time.
Based on reporting by The Better India
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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