Frequently Asked Questions
The questions parents actually ask.
Yes. Chisel is an independently run learning environment — not affiliated to any board or trust at this time, and in the active process of formal registration. Your child’s formal certification comes through NIOS or IGCSE, both widely recognised and legitimate. Chisel provides the education. The board provides the credentials. We say this openly because you deserve to know exactly what you are choosing.
Chisel is built not for profit, but for continuity. The fees reflect the actual cost of maintaining this environment: the adult-to-child ratios, the psychologists embedded in classrooms, the internship connections, the career guidance council, and the depth of support at every stage. Fee details are shared in conversation — after you have seen the environment.
Children from Chisel have transitioned into CBSE, ICSE, IGCSE, and IB environments without difficulty. Chisel provides an academic profile and grade-equivalent documentation to support any transfer. The foundation travels because it was built to.
That is a fair question, and we will not sidestep it. The oldest current learners are in Grade 9. What we offer in place of graduation outcomes is transparency — visit, speak with families who have been here for years, observe the children, and meet the team. A parent who joined when her child was two years old is still here, twelve years later. That continuity is the evidence we have. We stand by it.
If they choose that path? Yes. The mathematical and scientific foundations are strong. The NIOS structure allows focused preparation alongside broader learning. Chisel does not steer children toward competitive exams — but fully supports those who choose them.
Through responsibility, not fear. Children learn routines, respectful behaviour, and self-regulation from the earliest years. Conflict resolution begins with the children — community circles, peer mediators, and reflection. Adults hold boundaries with empathy and consistency, not punishment.
Chisel nurtures self-awareness, reflection, emotional clarity, and silence. No religious instruction of any kind. Children learn to be grounded — not affiliated. The silence time built into every week — from five minutes for a six-year-old to half an hour of stillness for a teenager — is perhaps the clearest expression of this.
No screens during the learning day. We don’t offer food. Transport arrangements vary by branch and are discussed during your visit.
Sports is not an optional activity at Chisel — it is a non-negotiable part of every day, built into the daily structure from the earliest years.
We use public parks for daily sports, which means children are outdoors, in real environments, moving and playing as part of their regular rhythm.
If a child shows particular aptitude — in athletics, football, cricket, swimming, or any other discipline — we notice it early and speak with parents directly. From there we connect the child with coaches and practitioners in that specific field. The school does not try to contain a child’s sporting potential within its own walls. We open the right doors.
Theatre, dance, music, fine arts, carpentry, and making are woven into the daily and weekly rhythm alongside academics. Hobby clubs — chess, crochet, reading, and others children discover and choose — run as longer-term pursuits, not one-off activities. We don’t call these extracurricular activities, they are part of our curriculum.
A child who loves to perform has space for it here. A child who loves to make things with their hands has space for it here. A child who is still finding what they love has time and freedom to discover it — without being pushed toward a predefined definition of talent.