In a bold and much-needed step towards realising the vision of Viksit Bharat 2047, the Preschool Olympiad (PSO), led by Bharat Shishu Vidya Initiatives, is pioneering a national movement to bring meaningful, child-appropriate assessments to the foundational years of schooling across India.
While NEP 2020 has laid out a strong framework for building Foundational Literacy and Numeracy (FLN) up to Grade 2, a critical question remains: how will these outcomes be measured meaningfully on the ground? Across India, thousands of preschools—especially in rural, tribal and economically marginalised regions—still lack access to standardised, developmentally appropriate assessment systems that respect the nature of early childhood learning while providing measurable insights.
The Preschool Olympiad was born out of this urgent need: a multi-subject, multi-level national assessment platform for children from Nursery to Grade 2, conducted through schools in joyful, child-friendly formats designed specifically for the early years.
In just a few months since launch, the initiative has already conducted 16,000+ assessments across 19 states, reaching children from Kanyakumari to Kashmir and Kutch to Kohima. The Olympiad is structured across multiple levels—School, Interschool, State and National—giving even the youngest learners an opportunity to experience national-level recognition.
Recently, PSO completed its Interschool Level assessments, where young achievers from across the country, were recognised.
The next phase of the journey now moves toward the State Round, where qualifying students will represent their schools at designated State capitals across India.
But the Preschool Olympiad is far more than just an exam.
It is designed as a diagnostic window into the early learning journey of children. The assessments help identify patterns that often remain unnoticed in classrooms—such as early language gaps, number anxiety, comprehension challenges, or emerging reasoning abilities. These same issues often surface much later in a child’s academic journey as fear of mathematics, difficulty expressing ideas in English, or weak scientific reasoning—often becoming visible only during board examinations.
By then, intervention becomes far more difficult.
PSO addresses this challenge by providing schools—especially small-budget preschools, balvatikas and emerging institutions—with a credible third-party assessment framework aligned with NEP 2020 and NIPUN Bharat. The curriculum is structured around micro-skills across Maths, English, Science, Humanities and Indian Heritage, ensuring that assessments remain both developmentally appropriate and academically meaningful.
To further strengthen transparency and accessibility, PSO has also launched a digital certificate verification platform, allowing participants to download their certificates through a dedicated portal. Each certificate carries a QR code for real-time authenticity verification, marking one of the first large-scale deployments of digitally verifiable foundational-level certificates in Indian school education.
The movement is also gaining recognition in national education conversations.
Sukanya Kumar, Founder of the Preschool Olympiad initiative, was recently invited to speak at the India Preschool Ranking Awards in Bengaluru, where she addressed school leaders on the importance of recognising learning potential in children long before traditional exams begin.
She also delivered a thought-provoking talk at TEDx New Delhi, titled “Why India’s Future is Being Shaped Long Before Exams Begin.” In the talk, she emphasised that meaningful assessment in the early years should not create pressure but instead serve as a tool for understanding how children think, learn and grow.
According to Kumar, “If we want to build a confident, innovative India by 2047, we must begin by understanding our children early—during the foundational years when curiosity, resilience and confidence take shape.”
With national coverage expanding and growing participation from schools across diverse regions of India, the Preschool Olympiad is now preparing to scale significantly in the coming months.
The next milestone: 1,00,000 assessments across India, bringing visibility, recognition and clarity to foundational learning outcomes for schools, teachers and parents alike.
Supported by visionary mentors like Dr. Jawahar Surisetti, the initiative continues to grow as a national platform, dedicated to strengthening the earliest years of education.
Because the children sitting in preschool classrooms today will become the workforce, innovators, and decision-makers of 2047. If India is serious about becoming a developed nation, the standardisation and understanding of early learning outcomes cannot remain optional—it must become a national priority.
The Preschool Olympiad is India’s answer to that call.
