Why Storytelling in the Classroom Matters
If you’re a teacher and you have children in your classroom, whether it’s digital or in-person, you need to have a solid grasp of the art of storytelling. This is especially true if the children
If you’re a teacher and you have children in your classroom, whether it’s digital or in-person, you need to have a solid grasp of the art of storytelling. This is especially true if the children
“Give him the phone, or he will cry.” That one sentence runs millions of Pakistani homes. It starts at the dinner table. A crying child, a tired parent, and a quick solution. And just like
“My son got 95% in Urdu and Math, so why is he struggling to speak in front of five people?” It is a question many Pakistani parents are asking behind closed doors. We spend lakhs
I’ll read it later, Miss. In every classroom in Lahore or Karachi, there is a student who says this. They aren't lazy, and they aren't disinterested. They are simply tired. They are tired of the
Playgroup children learn best through visuals and interaction and AlifLaila Kids Digital Library delivers: Colorful illustrations Page-flip animations (like real books) Audio + interactive reading experience Wide collection of stories AlifLaila Kids Digital Library is
"I know the letters, Mama, but they keep moving." If you have ever seen your child struggle to read a simple sentence in Urdu, only to see them get frustrated and close the book, you
"Drop the phone!" It’s the daily battle in every Pakistani lounge. We see the glazed-over eyes, the thumb mindlessly scrolling, and the instant tantrum the moment the Wi-Fi cuts out. If you feel like you’re
"Wait! Watch this!" The screen is glowing, the music is screaming, and you have not even sat down and taken a cup of tea when another viral video has caught the interest of your child.
Look at your child at this moment. Are they staring at a screen? Probably Yes. Parents are always told that AI in education is the future. We find AI doing the homework, AI summarizing the
Last night, I heard something that stayed with me. My daughter told her younger brother, "You can't play with this. It's mine." He looked hurt, and she didn't even notice. She just walked away. It