Manasvi Yuvaraj a 10 year old Innovator
MoonCampaign by Manasvi (9 years)
Our Social Impact - We're transforming education globally with free robotics and math workshops in the US, UK, Canada, and Australia. Our workshops have helped 66,000 students alone in the US plus 14,000 students benefit from our four-week sessions.
Innovative MoonCampaigns
Minutes of Visual Content
Unique Video Views
Unique Feedbacks
STEM Transformation
Increased Confidence
Moonpreneur STEM Program Student
Project Name: What Would School Look Like If Kids Designed It
Skills
Arduino programming, sensor integration, conditional logic, product design, and more
Category
Panel Discussion
MoonCampaigns highlight student's creativity, public speaking, presentation skills, and teamwork, with an impressive track record that speaks volumes. MoonCampaigns, through quarterly Show & Tell, highlight thousands of inspiring learning stories from Moonpreneur students worldwide.
Innovative MoonCampaigns
Minutes of Visual Content
Unique Video Views
Unique Feedbacks and appreciation to kids from community
parents observed transformational changes in their ward's STEM knowledge and leadership skills
Parents Reported Increased Confidence in their child
Topic Chosen:
"What Would School Look Like If Kids Designed It?"
Why I Chose This Topic:
I chose this because I think school would be more fun, creative, and exciting if kids had a say in how it’s designed. We could learn in ways that make sense to us and enjoy school more.
Key Ideas / Examples:
Learnings, Challenges, and Growth:
This kind of school would teach kids to be confident, creative, and curious. Some projects might be tricky, but we would learn by trying, making mistakes, and celebrating our successes. It would make learning exciting and meaningful.
What if I told you homework could disappear forever?
There’s just one catch… kids should be the ones designing the school.
Hi, I’m Manasvi, and today I’m going to talk about what school would look like if kids were in charge.
First of all, we’d have recess after every class, and it would last longer, too! Every class would be fun, exciting, and creative. Imagine building a science project instead of answering 20 questions on a worksheet, or designing your own mini-business instead of writing an essay about one. Science would have hands-on experiments, and history would use VR headsets to visit ancient places like the pyramids. That way, we could use our creativity, teamwork, and problem-solving skills while actually enjoying learning.
At lunch, snacks would be free, and lunch breaks would be longer. Teachers would be like coaches, helping us explore what we actually love. For example, if I liked animals, I’d get to go to the zoo. If someone loved art, they’d get to paint and do crafts.
Now, about homework, let’s pause for a second. My name is Manasvi, I’m 10 years old, and I chose this topic because I haven’t been able to get into the STEM program due to the lottery system. But I love science and hands-on experiments, so this idea is really close to my heart.
Ok, back to homework, kids would get to vote on whether we even have it. And I think we all know how that vote would turn out!
We’d also have something called “Choose Your Teacher Day,” where students could pick which teacher they want to learn from each week. All the teachers would teach every subject, but we’d get to choose who inspires us the most.
So, if kids created school, it would be fun, creative, exciting, and full of learning that we actually enjoy. We’d still work hard—but we’d be excited to show up every single day.
Thank you for listening!
See what people around the world are saying about Krishanth's innovative
bike safety project
WEF's Future of Jobs Report 2025 reveals that 40% of employers expect to reduce their workforce where AI can automate tasks . While AI is projected to create 69 million new jobs globally by 2030, it will simultaneously eliminate 83 million positions, particularly in clerical, administrative, and routine cognitive roles. The message is clear: routine tasks are being automated, but critical thinking and communication skills cannot be replaced.
Critical Thinking & Analysis
Rated by 78% of business executives as the most important skill they seek, yet only 34% of college graduates arrive well-prepared in this area
Communication Skills
Essential for collaboration, innovation, and leadership in STEM fields
Problem-Solving
The ability to break down complex, unprecedented challenges and devise creative solutions
Adaptability & Resilience
Mental agility to assess new situations and pivot strategies in rapidly changing environments
When students (ages 7-16) build projects, they're not just learning to code, they're developing the future-proof skills that AI cannot replicate:
Technical Skills:
Arduino programming, sensor integration, conditional logic, and hardware troubleshooting
Critical Thinking:
Analyzing real-world safety problems, designing solutions, and debugging when things don't work as expected
Communication:
Articulating their process, presenting their work, and explaining complex technical concepts in accessible language
Digital Marketing & Entrepreneurship:
Showcasing their innovations publicly, building their personal brand, and learning to pitch their ideas
Problem-Solving:
Overcoming challenges like mixed-up variables and incorrect responses through systematic troubleshooting
©️ Copyright, Moonpreneur Inc.
691 S Milpitas Blvd, STE 217 Milpitas CA 95035, USA