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This talk invites us to rethink the purpose and structure of modern education. It begins by questioning the current system which is often described as an “education machine” where learning becomes transactional, driven by fear, competition and constant evaluation. In such a system, knowledge is compartmentalized and students are treated as outputs to be tested, graded and prepared for a product-driven market. Drawing on Mahatma Gandhi’s 1931 address at Chatham House, the talk revisits the idea of India’s once vibrant network of decentralized village schools which is the “Beautiful Tree” of indigenous education that nurtured rooted and community-based learning before colonial disruption. Ultimately, the talk argues that education must move beyond producing skilled technicians to nurturing resilient, creative and collaborative individuals. By regenerating the “Beautiful Tree,” we can transform education from a system that merely extracts potential into one that sustains and cultivates human growth. The Alumni Committee is pleased to welcome Suparna Diwakar to TEDxGIPE 2026. A GIPE alumna and Chief Consultant to the National Syllabus & TLM Committee, her work spans and encompasses education, curriculum design and long-term institutional thinking with a strong grounding in classroom realities. What sets her apart is her ability to engage seamlessly with systems thinking. Drawing on decades of hands on experience, she brings to the TEDx stag a perspective that is both reflective and actionable, marked by clarity, depth and a deep commitment to reimagining learning fro the future. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx