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EduPaper – Free Educational Newspaper for Underprivileged Children

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by Amrutha Varshini · Mar 29, 2026

Solution Description

EduPaper is a low-cost educational newspaper designed for underprivileged children who do not have access to proper study materials. It provides simple lessons, basic educational content, short stories, and general knowledge in an easy-to-understand format. This initiative aims to bridge the education gap by reaching children who lack access to books and digital learning resources. It focuses on improving basic literacy and knowledge through simple and engaging content..

Business Model

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Business Model is Private

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Score: 0.0 / 10

💬 Discussion (2)

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Vipul Rawat · 2 weeks ago

but how can you make it a business, its a ngo kind of plan

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Amrutha Varshini · 2 weeks ago

Thank you for your feedback! I understand it seems like an NGO-style plan. The idea can actually be developed as a social enterprise — for example, through low-cost subscriptions, sponsorships, CSR partnerships, or small ads. The main goal remains reaching underprivileged children, but this approach ensures the project is self-sustainable while creating impact

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Amrutha Varshini · 2 weeks ago

I am looking for feedback and suggestions to improve this idea and make it scalable. Any guidance would be helpful.

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🚀 Execution (1)

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Amrutha Varshini
2 weeks ago
In Progress
Progress 0%

I started working on this idea because I noticed that many underprivileged children in slum and rural areas do not have access to proper study materials. I wanted to create a simple and accessible way for them to learn basic concepts. So far, I have developed the concept of EduPaper, a free educational newspaper that includes simple lessons, stories, and general knowledge in an easy-to-understand format. I have also explored possible ways to sustain it through advertisements, sponsorships, and CSR support. The biggest challenge is understanding how to implement and distribute the newspaper effectively while keeping it free for children. My next steps are to gather feedback, design a sample version of the newspaper, and connect with schools, NGOs, and mentors to start a small pilot.

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