Kokrajhar, Aug. 29 -- Children have always looked at the night sky with wonder. Stars become diamonds, and the moon, a friendly guardian. For them, space isn't just a distant, unreachable void; it's a playground where imagination and science collide.

This natural curiosity often starts with simple questions: Why does the moon change shape? Why do stars twinkle? Can we live on Mars? These questions reflect a young mind's instinct to explore the unknown, where rockets can be built from cardboard and astronauts can ride bicycles to the moon.

Now, the Bodoland Territorial Region (BTR) is turning that curiosity into a classroom reality. The BTR has launched the Bodoland Space Education Programme, a project that has already established 15 "Sc...