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June 15, 2026Introduction: A Day the World Stands Still — and Breathes
Every year on June 21, something quietly extraordinary happens. In parks, school courtyards, stadiums, and living rooms across 177 countries, millions of people unroll mats, close their eyes, and simply breathe together. International Yoga Day — officially recognised by the United Nations in 2014 and first observed in 2015 — has become one of the most widely celebrated wellness events in the world.
But beyond the photo opportunities and celebrity endorsements, there is a deeply practical question worth sitting with: What does yoga actually do for young people? And why should schools and students care about it beyond one day a year?
At Scholar Planet, an integrated educational platform reaching students across India and in over 177 countries, we believe that holistic learning is not a luxury — it is a foundation. This International Yoga Day, we want to go deeper than the headlines and explore what the science, the tradition, and the lived experience of students tells us about yoga’s role in building better learners.
What Is International Yoga Day? A Brief History
On December 11, 2014, the United Nations General Assembly passed a resolution declaring June 21 as the International Day of Yoga. The date was proposed by India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who described yoga as “India’s gift to the world.” June 21 was chosen specifically because it is the summer solstice — the longest day of the year in the Northern Hemisphere, and a date that holds deep significance in many world cultures.
The first International Yoga Day was observed on June 21, 2015, with a record-breaking gathering of 35,985 people performing yoga at Rajpath in New Delhi — a number that entered the Guinness World Records. Since then, millions have joined annually, making Yoga Day one of the most impactful global health initiatives the UN has championed.
The theme for International Yoga Day 2025 is “Yoga for One Earth, One Health” — a reminder that individual wellbeing and planetary health are not separate concerns. For students, this theme carries a special resonance: taking care of your mind and body is also taking care of your future.
Yoga and the Indian Student: A Relationship Worth Rebuilding
India is the birthplace of yoga, a practice described in ancient texts like the Rigveda dating back over 5,000 years. The word yoga comes from the Sanskrit root yuj, meaning to unite — to bring mind, body, and breath into alignment.
Yet in modern Indian education, the very students who inherit this tradition are also among the most stressed learners in the world. According to the National Mental Health Survey conducted by NIMHANS, nearly 7.3% of school-going children in India show signs of mental health challenges — a number many experts believe is significantly underreported. Academic pressure, long school hours, exam anxiety, and increasingly sedentary digital habits are creating a generation that is intellectually pushed hard but physically and emotionally undertended.
This is where yoga is not just tradition — it is medicine.
8 Proven Benefits of Yoga for Students
1. Sharper Focus and Better Concentration
Research consistently shows that yoga improves attentional control — the ability to stay focused on a task without the mind wandering. A study published in the Journal of Physical Activity and Health found that a single 20-minute session of Hatha yoga significantly improved participants’ speed and accuracy on cognitive tests compared to a control group.
For students preparing for exams, sitting through long lectures, or working on complex assignments, this capacity to direct and sustain attention is invaluable. Schools that have introduced morning yoga sessions report that students arrive at first period calmer and more ready to engage.
2. Reduced Exam Anxiety and Stress
The modern Indian student faces one of the most competitive educational environments in the world — with CBSE, ICSE, state board exams, JEE, NEET, and entrance tests for virtually every professional path. It is no surprise that exam anxiety is nearly universal.
Yoga activates the parasympathetic nervous system — the body’s rest-and-digest mode — by slowing breathing and reducing cortisol (the stress hormone). Pranayama practices like Anulom Vilom (alternate nostril breathing) and Bhramari (the humming bee breath) have been shown in multiple clinical studies to reduce symptoms of anxiety within minutes of practice.
Regular yoga practice teaches students to regulate their stress response rather than be controlled by it — a skill that serves them in examinations and well beyond.
3. Better Sleep Quality
Many students — particularly those in secondary school and competitive exam preparation — report poor sleep quality, late-night studying habits, and the kind of exhaustion that no amount of coffee fixes. Poor sleep directly impairs memory consolidation, mood regulation, and academic performance.
Yoga improves sleep by reducing physiological and psychological arousal. Restorative poses like Balasana (child’s pose), Viparita Karani (legs-up-the-wall pose), and Yoga Nidra (guided body-scan relaxation) are particularly effective sleep aids. A study in the International Journal of Yoga found that students who practiced yoga for 30 minutes before bed fell asleep faster and reported higher sleep quality scores.
Better sleep means better learning — it is as simple, and as important, as that.
4. Improved Memory and Cognitive Function
Memory is not just about how hard you study — it is about how well your brain processes and stores what you encounter. Yoga has been shown to improve hippocampal volume (the brain region associated with memory formation) and to increase levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), a protein that supports the growth and connectivity of brain cells.
A landmark study from the University of Illinois found that 20 minutes of yoga improved working memory and cognitive flexibility more than 20 minutes of aerobic exercise. For students trying to retain large amounts of information — history timelines, chemistry formulas, literary analysis — a yoga practice is not time taken away from studying; it is studying smarter.
5. Better Posture and Physical Health
Students spend enormous hours sitting — in classrooms, at study tables, and increasingly in front of screens. This sedentary posture leads to back pain, neck strain, forward head posture, and reduced lung capacity — all of which feed back into fatigue, mood, and concentration.
Yoga is one of the most effective antidotes. Regular practice strengthens the core and back muscles, opens the chest, improves spinal alignment, and dramatically increases flexibility. Even simple sequences like Tadasana (mountain pose), Bhujangasana (cobra pose), and Marjariasana (cat-cow) can undo much of the damage that a school day of sitting creates.
6. Emotional Regulation and Resilience
One of yoga’s most underappreciated gifts to young learners is the development of emotional intelligence — the capacity to recognise, understand, and manage one’s emotional states. In an age of social media comparison, peer pressure, and the relentless noise of digital life, this is not a soft skill. It is a survival skill.
Yoga teaches students to sit with discomfort, to observe their thoughts without being swept away by them, and to return to steadiness when life gets turbulent. These are not abstract philosophical ideas — they are practical capacities that manifest as less reactivity in conflict, more persistence through difficulty, and a more stable sense of self-worth.
7. Building Healthy Habits Early
The habits formed in childhood and adolescence tend to persist throughout life. Students who develop a relationship with yoga early are far more likely to maintain some form of mindfulness or movement practice into adulthood — contributing to lifelong reduction in cardiovascular disease, mental health challenges, and lifestyle disorders.
India currently faces a significant burden of lifestyle diseases — diabetes, hypertension, and obesity are rising steeply among young adults. Building a yoga-oriented relationship with the body in school years is one of the most powerful preventive health investments a society can make.
8. A Sense of Belonging and Community
When yoga is practiced collectively — in a classroom, on a school ground, or at a community event like the International Yoga Day celebration — it creates a shared experience that transcends differences in academic performance, economic background, or social status. Every student on a mat is equal.
This sense of community and shared purpose is something Scholar Planet deeply values. Our platform connects students from cities and villages across India — including partnerships with UP Samagra Shiksha, DSE Ladakh, and Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan — and we believe that building a sense of belonging is as important to education as any textbook lesson.
Yoga in Indian Schools: Where Policy and Practice Meet
The National Education Policy 2020, which Scholar Planet’s learning platform is built to align with, explicitly emphasises holistic development — recognising that cognitive learning cannot be separated from physical, emotional, and creative growth. NEP 2020 calls for integrating yoga and physical activity into the school curriculum, not as extras, but as essentials.
Several states have already moved in this direction. Uttar Pradesh — where Scholar Planet has one of its deepest partnerships through Samagra Shiksha — has incorporated yoga into school routines. Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, and Rajasthan have launched structured school yoga programmes. The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) has made yoga a recognised subject and wellness activity across its affiliated schools.
This is a positive and necessary direction. But policy implementation is only as good as the resources available to teachers and students. Scholar Planet is committed to supporting this vision by making wellness content accessible alongside academic content — because a child who is anxious, exhausted, or disconnected cannot learn at their potential, no matter how good the curriculum is.
Simple Yoga Poses Every Student Can Try Today
You don’t need a yoga studio, expensive equipment, or years of practice to begin. Here are five beginner-friendly poses that any student can practice — even in a small room:
Tadasana (Mountain Pose) — Stand tall, feet together, arms at sides, eyes closed. Breathe deeply for one minute. This simple pose is an anchor for body awareness and calm before a study session.
Vrikshasana (Tree Pose) — Stand on one foot, place the other on your inner calf or thigh (not the knee), and bring palms together at your chest. Hold for 30 seconds per side. Improves balance, focus, and stability.
Balasana (Child’s Pose) — Kneel, sit back on your heels, and fold forward with arms extended or alongside your body. Rest your forehead on the ground. Hold for 1–2 minutes. A powerful stress-release pose.
Bhujangasana (Cobra Pose) — Lie on your stomach, place palms under shoulders, and gently lift your chest. Hold for 30 seconds. Counteracts the forward slump of sitting and energises the spine.
Anulom Vilom (Alternate Nostril Breathing) — Close right nostril with thumb, inhale through left. Close left nostril with ring finger, exhale through right. Inhale through right, exhale through left. Repeat for 5 minutes. One of the most effective pranayama techniques for calming exam nerves.
How Scholar Planet Celebrates International Yoga Day
This June 21, Scholar Planet is celebrating International Yoga Day through our Yoga Day Video Contest — inviting students across India to share their yoga journey, document their practice, or simply show how they are bringing wellness into their daily routine.
The contest is a reflection of who Scholar Planet is: a platform that believes every student has something to express, and that creativity, movement, and self-expression are as much a part of learning as solving equations or parsing poetry.
We are inspired every day by the students on our platform — from government school learners in Uttar Pradesh to students in Kendriya Vidyalayas, from classrooms in Ladakh to schools partnered with us across 3,216 cities worldwide. We see their curiosity, their resilience, and their hunger to grow — and we want to give them every tool to do so.
Yoga is one of those tools. An ancient one. And one that the world needs now more than ever.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Q: When is International Yoga Day celebrated?
A: International Yoga Day is celebrated every year on June 21. It was declared by the United Nations in 2014 and first observed globally in 2015.
Q: Why is June 21 chosen for Yoga Day?
A: June 21 is the summer solstice — the longest day of the year in the Northern Hemisphere. It holds significance in many cultures and was chosen at India’s suggestion.
Q: What is the theme of International Yoga Day 2025?
A: The theme for International Yoga Day 2025 is “Yoga for One Earth, One Health” — emphasising the connection between individual wellbeing and planetary health.
Q: How does yoga benefit students academically?
A: Yoga improves focus, memory, emotional regulation, and sleep quality — all of which directly support academic performance. It also reduces exam anxiety and builds mental resilience.
Q: How long should a student practice yoga each day?
A: Even 15–20 minutes of daily yoga can produce measurable benefits in mood, concentration, and energy. Consistency matters more than duration.
Q: Can yoga replace physical education in schools?
A: Yoga is a valuable complement to physical education, not a replacement. It addresses dimensions of fitness — flexibility, breathing, mindfulness — that conventional sports may not.
Conclusion: Learning That Lights Up the Body Too
Scholar Planet’s mission is learning that lights up the world. But a world of bright, engaged learners is built one student at a time — and each of those students is a whole human being, not just a mind to be filled with information.
This International Yoga Day, we invite every student, teacher, parent, and school to pause, breathe, and remember that education at its best is holistic. It builds bodies that are strong, minds that are clear, and spirits that are resilient.
Unroll a mat. Take a breath. And know that at Scholar Planet, we are with you — in every pose, every lesson, and every step forward.
Happy International Yoga Day from the Scholar Planet family!




