This programme is currently paused — the Rural Science Program is not active at this time. If your organisation wants to fund or revive it, explore a partnership with us →

Young-Scientist rural science program — science education for underprivileged children

What We Do → Rural Science Program

Rural Science Enrichment

Science education is not a privilege. We take hands-on science to underprivileged communities — through NGO and corporate CSR partnerships.

Science for Every Child

Young-Scientist is a social impact enterprise. We believe that the quality of a child's science education should not depend on the school they attend or the community they grow up in.

Through partnerships with NGOs and corporates, we have been able to extend our science programs to children who would otherwise never experience hands-on, visual science education.

Over 4 years of rural outreach, we have worked with several schools, NGOs and communities across Chennai and beyond — bringing science clubs, experiment kits, science shows and lab design to underserved areas.

What We Bring to Rural Schools

  • Weekly science clubs (Dr Kalam, Faraday, Edison)
  • Theme-based science workshops
  • Science shows with live demonstrations
  • Experiment kits for schools to keep
  • Lab design consultation and setup
  • Science activity guides for early childhood educators

How to Make This Happen

Corporate CSR Partnership

Your company funds a rural science program as part of your CSR mandate. Young-Scientist designs and delivers the programme — we handle everything. You get documented impact reports and the satisfaction of real community contribution.

NGO Partnership

If your NGO works with underprivileged children and would like to add science enrichment to your programmes, we'd love to explore a partnership. We bring the content and expertise; you bring the community access.

Fund or Revive the Rural Science Program

The Rural Science Program is currently paused. If you're a corporate, foundation or NGO wanting to fund science education for underprivileged children, we'd welcome that conversation.

Explore a Partnership →