1. Rezwan’s Ideal Floating School:
When the village paths sway in the river’s turbulence, the windows of brick-and-mortar classrooms get stuck—children’s dreams trapped under tattered sheets. At that very moment, from a small boat of an architect, a beacon rises: the floating school. What began as a modest initiative in 2002 has today transformed into over a hundred schools, libraries, and health centers, becoming both a national and international model.
2. An Example of Establishing the Right to Education on Water:
Floating schools are not merely boats—they are moving classrooms, where the twinkling lights of solar panels, neatly arranged books on tables, and the silent glow of laptops together create lessons for a new day. Cutting through the dense darkness like a shower of rain, these boats illuminate the minds of rural children; it is as if gold of knowledge is being harvested in competition with the waters. According to Reuters, these schools operate in flood-prone areas using solar power, computers, and local curricula.
3. Rezwan and SSS — One Architect, One Movement:
Architect Mohammad Rezwan once began with his own modest funds—today his organization, Shidhulai Swanirvar Sangstha (SSS), manages over a hundred floating boats, providing core services of schools, libraries, and health centers. This initiative has preserved education across many areas in the country and has been recognized internationally as a model, receiving awards and accolades.
4. Global Emulation: Philippines — Schools for the Children of the Sea:
Beyond South Asia, sea-based indigenous communities in specific Philippine islands—Bajau and Sama tribes—have adopted the floating school model in alignment with their mother tongue and the realities of life on water. Local reports show that the government and NGOs have established floating schools in these areas, ensuring continuous education; here, “the school reaches the child”, not the other way around. Various Philippine reports describe this model as inspired by Bangladesh.
5. Nigeria: Makoko, Lagos — Unyielding Education in the Urban Lagoon:
The concept of floating schools is not new in Africa. In Lagos’ Makoko area, floating classroom projects, combining community participation, recycled materials, and renewable energy, have become a green-education model. Recent reports indicate that Makoko classrooms use solar panels, pedal-powered generators, and other off-grid solutions—so even when electricity does not reach the lagoon, the light of education continues to shine. This example demonstrates that urban wetlands can also host effective floating education through technology and community-driven initiatives.
6. Three Distinctive Features of the Floating Model:
The floating school model is spreading rapidly for three reasons—(1) Accessibility: the school reaches the family; (2) Sustainable Technology Use: solar panels, computers, and easy maintenance; (3) Community-Based Management: local teachers, volunteers, and community stakeholders. The applicability of the same concept in environments like the Philippines and Nigeria is making it a global classroom model.
7. Challenges — Testing the Reality of the Model:
Yet behind every success lie real challenges—financial stability, mechanical maintenance, and teacher retention. For instance, the upkeep of solar systems and batteries, structural decay in wet conditions, and long-term funding are essential; without solving these, the model cannot be sustainably ethical. These limitations must be addressed through local and international cooperation.
8. Raising the Flag of Knowledge Even on Water:
Rezwan’s floating schools are not merely an effort—they are a signal that when technology and local initiative merge with the right design, constraints become a cradle of possibilities. The emulation by countries such as the Philippines, Nigeria, and others proves that education can stand firm even on the water; all it requires is courage, planning, and community trust. As climate risks increase in many parts of the world, this model teaches us—education will not stop because locations change; rather, it will float with the platform.