The hours away from the syllabus are why the syllabus works.
A parent’s instinct in the PU years is understandable: every hour not spent on JEE or NEET feels like an hour lost. The science of how young people learn — and the shape of the careers they are heading into — both say the opposite. The club is not the distraction from the preparation. For most students, it is what makes the preparation hold.
Why we do not switch this off for two years
It is tempting to believe that a student who does nothing but study will out-perform one who also builds a telescope mount, argues a geometry problem for fun, or spends a Sunday counting birds. Every experienced teacher knows it is not true. A mind held at a single task for months does not sharpen — it dulls, narrows, and eventually resents the work. Focus is not infinite fuel to be rationed; it is a capacity that is restored by genuine engagement elsewhere, and eroded by monotony.
The club is where a student comes back to themselves. Two hours in the MakerSpace or under the night sky is not two hours stolen from Physics — it is the recovery that makes the next eight hours of Physics actually productive. The student who never steps away is not studying more; they are studying worse, and heading toward the quiet burnout that undoes far more JEE attempts than any missing hour ever did.
There is a second, deeper reason we protect these hours — and it is the one that will matter most for your child’s life after the rank.
In an age of AI, the marks are necessary — and no longer sufficient
A rank was a career
For a generation, clearing JEE or NEET and finishing the degree was close to a guarantee. The credential did the work; the market rewarded the qualification itself. A parent who focused a child entirely on the entrance exam was, for that world, making a rational bet.
A rank is the entry ticket
Artificial intelligence now does much of the routine technical work that a credential used to guarantee. What it cannot yet do — and what the economy is paying more and more for — is originality, judgment, the ability to build something real, to work with others, and to think across fields. The rank still opens the door. It no longer furnishes the room.
This is not a reason to care less about the examination — CFAL cares about it enormously, and the record shows it. It is a reason not to let the examination be the only thing a young person practises. The student who, alongside a strong rank, has designed and failed and rebuilt something in the MakerSpace, has stood at a telescope and understood what they were seeing, has argued a proof and defended a conclusion, has led a small team on a real project — that student is precisely who thrives in an AI-shaped economy. The clubs are not enrichment around the edges of the serious work. They are training for the part of the future the syllabus does not cover.
Four rooms where students build, not just study
Math Club
Where mathematics is done for the pleasure and the difficulty of it — competition problems, workshops, and the kind of sustained argument that builds the reasoning JEE Advanced and the Olympiads both reward. Students prepare for and compete in local and national contests, and teach younger children, which is how one truly learns a subject.
◉ Follow @cfalmathclubNature Club
Real fieldwork, not a poster campaign — trips to reserves and sanctuaries, tree and species surveys, and conservation projects that connect a student to the living world beyond the textbook. The break that a young mind most needs from a screen and a syllabus is often simply time outdoors, paying attention to something alive.
◉ Follow @cfalnatureclubAstrophysics Club
CFAL’s own telescope, pointed at real skies. Students capture and analyse their own images of stars, galaxies, and nebulae — gaining genuine experience of observational science and data analysis, and releasing work under Creative Commons. There are few better ways to remember why one wanted to study physics in the first place.
◉ Follow @cfalastroclubMakerSpace Club
3D printers, laser cutters, electronics — and the freedom to identify a problem, build a prototype, watch it fail, and build it better. This is the single most future-facing thing a student can practise: the whole loop of creation that AI cannot yet do and that every serious employer is now looking for. A President’s-award invention began in a room like this.
◉ Follow @cfalindiaSee what the students are actually making
The clubs post their real work — problems, observations, fieldwork, and builds — on Instagram. It is the truest picture of life at CFAL beyond the results.
A serious preparation, and a whole young person.
The record and the clubs are not in tension — they are the same philosophy seen twice. Come on a Saturday and see how a demanding academic programme and a genuinely alive student life share one campus.
Visit CFAL on a Saturday