- Mittstore
The World Health Organisation notes that quality early stimulation boosts cognitive development by 20-30% in under-resourced settings, reducing stunting impacts (affecting 35% of Indian kids under 5 per NFHS-5). That is why before students learn to read and write, they can learn by TOUCHING - MOVING - LISTENING - IMAGINING. That’s the magic of foundational learning. If set strong, it can just change the whole decorum of how the kid lives their life henceforth.
And that’s exactly the space Mittsure’s NCF Inspired Jaadui Pitara is designed for!
It is inspired by the National Curriculum Framework (NCF) and the vision of NEP 2020. Here, Jaadui Pitara shifts from teaching early education with worksheets and rote tasks to pretending to play with purpose, the kind of learning where children actually respond to.
So rather than “all work and no play” it is play and learn together. This blog is a detailed guide on what Jaadui Pitara is, how to play and study together and what is the role of Jaadui Pitara in early childhood.
Children mastering basics by Grade 3 are 4x more likely to complete secondary school; India's ASER data shows foundational gaps cause 15-20% higher dropout rates by adolescence. So foundational performance in the ages of 2.5 to 6+ is not just about academic performance.
This age can very well improve the neural changes in the brain that betters coordination, balance, and accuracy.
It can also make the reflexes strong as it helps build language through engagement in active, back-and-forth conversations, and even in “serve and return” exchanges.
Foundational learning is the best time to teach kids to focus, explore, and express. This also helps your kids in forming positive emotional associations with learning.
And a well-curated Jaadui Pitara shapes all these skills by combining movement, storytelling, art, music, and hands-on activities, so that a kid gets to learn basic skills in their early years.
And Mittsure’s Jaadui Pitara is the magical box that adds magic to every child’s growth in their foundational journey as it has curated age-appropriate materials that grow with the child cognitively and emotionally.
.Kids in this age bracket start having sensory understanding and movement. So they explore the world best by stacking, shaking, squeezing, listening, and imitating.
This is why the first level of Mittsure’s Jaadui Pitara includes resources like:
And who better than parents to have by your side?
This Level 1 Home Learning Treasure Box Jaadui Pitara for age 2.5 - 4 years works together to help children build coordination, curiosity, and comfort with learning environments, without adding any pressure of examination or assessment.
As children grow, they start understanding more things and their play becomes more intentional. They can now sort, match, compare, and even ask questions so it is the right time to introduce early logic and structure.
This is what the second level of Mittsure’s Jaadui Pitara completely understands and accordingly has the following play sets:
Playing with Level 2 Jaadui Pitara by Mittsure supports reasoning, early concepts, and social interaction in a way that they feel natural and enjoyable.
It’s the age when children start approaching formal schooling, and they become ready to connect play with early academics so it’s the right age to plan thoughtfully so that they have the best of the learning.
Mittsure’s Jaadui Pitara helps students bridge play-based learning with the school's curriculum. The Level 3 home learning Jaadui Pitara box for kids includes:
With this learning for kids becomes play with intention where they think they are playing but they are actually learning and this prepares children in reading, writing, and numbers without making it difficult for them to grasp the concepts.
Jaadui Pitara is a term that is introduced by NCERT and is a play-based learning resource designed for children aged 3-8 (foundational stage) under NEP 2020. And its true role is not in what it contains but in how it is used. With detailed manuals and curated learning resources Mittsure’s NCF Inspired Jaadui Pitara:
And this is very important in early education because what matters more is how a child should feel about learning rather than how much they should learn.