IKS-Based Wellness Education for Schools and Communities

Educators PlusPublication

IKS-Based Wellness Education for Schools and Communities

Author(s)Dr. Harshvardhan Singh

Author Profile(s)

Dr. Harshvardhan SinghDirector, PsyForU Research International Department of Educational Research and Psychometrics, New Delhi, India
DOITo be assigned by Crossref following publisher membership approval. Once registered, this DOI will permanently resolve to this bibliographic landing page.
ISBN978-81-995662-8-6
PublisherEducators Plus
Published2026-03-03
Price699

Overview

IKS-Based Wellness Education for Schools and Communities is an academic and educational book written by Dr. Harshvardhan Singh and published by BOOKSKART WORLD under the EP DOWNLOADS imprint. The book presents wellness education through the lens of Indian Knowledge Systems, with special focus on Ayurveda, Ahara, food-as-medicine literacy, traditional diets, mindful eating, regional food traditions, gut health, kitchen-based learning, food ethics, community health, and school/community wellness frameworks. It has been designed as a conceptual and educational resource for teachers, students, parents, community educators, wellness facilitators, curriculum planners, teacher educators, school leaders, and general readers.

The central argument of the book is that wellness education should not remain limited to hygiene messages, nutrition charts, disease-prevention campaigns, or occasional awareness programmes. Health and wellness must be understood as multidimensional processes involving physical vitality, mental clarity, emotional balance, ethical food choices, social harmony, environmental awareness, and meaningful daily routines.

The book draws strongly on the Indian concept of Svasthya, which refers to being established in one’s natural state. It explains that health is not merely the absence of illness, but a dynamic state of balance involving body, mind, food, environment, family, community, routine, and consciousness. In this sense, the book treats wellness education as life education.

A major strength of the book is its focus on food and education. The book presents the kitchen as the first health school, where children and families learn food selection, food preparation, hygiene, mindful consumption, sharing, cultural continuity, and healthy habits. It also discusses regional food traditions, local ingredients, fermented foods, spices, herbs, gut health, seasonal diets, food ethics, mindful eating, and sustainable food systems.

The later chapters move toward community and institutional application. The book discusses community health through traditional food systems and proposes an Educational Framework for Food-as-Medicine Literacy. This framework is intended for schools, communities, teachers, NGOs, health educators, curriculum planners, and local institutions that wish to integrate food wisdom, nutrition literacy, wellness education, and Indian Knowledge Systems in a responsible and contemporary way.

The book does not present traditional knowledge as a replacement for modern medicine, nutrition science, or professional health advice. Instead, it encourages responsible integration, safety awareness, professional consultation, evidence-building, and context-sensitive application. It is especially useful for school wellness programmes, community health education, food-literacy modules, kitchen-garden projects, interdisciplinary teaching, and culturally rooted wellness education.

Scope Note

This book focuses on Indian Knowledge System-based wellness education for schools and communities. It examines Ayurveda, Ahara, food-as-medicine literacy, traditional diets, mindful eating, gut health, kitchen-based learning, regional food traditions, food ethics, community health, sustainable food practices, and educational frameworks for wellness literacy. It is intended for educational, cultural, conceptual, and wellness-literacy purposes and should not be treated as medical advice, clinical guidance, diagnostic material, nutritional prescription, Ayurvedic treatment, herbal prescription, detoxification protocol, or substitute for consultation with qualified professionals.

Methodological Nature

Conceptual, educational, synthesis-oriented, wellness-literacy focused, IKS-based, culturally rooted, school-wellness oriented, community-health oriented, food-literacy focused, nutrition-education oriented, interdisciplinary, and framework-based.

Source Base

The book draws upon multiple knowledge streams, including Ayurveda, Ahara, traditional Indian food practices, regional food cultures, community health, nutrition literacy, mindful eating, food ethics, gut health, preventive wellness, and educational framework development.

It uses key Sanskrit and IKS concepts such as Svasthya, Ahara, Agni, Prakriti, Dosha, Dinacharya, Ritucharya, Satvik food, Pancha Mahabhoota, Tridosha, Rasa, Virya, Vipaka, and Food as Medicine in simplified educational language.

The book follows a responsible integration approach. It does not treat traditional knowledge and modern science as opposing systems. Instead, it encourages dialogue, evidence-building, safety awareness, professional consultation, and context-sensitive application.

Major Framework / Practical Orientation

Educational Framework for Food-as-Medicine Literacy

Major Themes Covered

Ayurveda and the Philosophy of Health

Body–Mind–Spirit Balance

Pancha Mahabhoota and Tridosha

Prakriti, Dosha, Agni and Svasthya

Food as Medicine in Ayurveda

Ahara as Indian Science of Food and Health

Seasonal Eating and Traditional Nutrition

Kitchen as the First Health School

Kitchen-Based Learning and Family Food Education

Gut Health and Traditional Diets

Fermented Foods, Prebiotics and Probiotics

Regional Food Traditions and Community Wellness

Food Security and Community Food Systems

Food Ethics and Mindful Eating

Sustainable Food Practices

Community Health through Traditional Food Systems

Women as Custodians of Food Knowledge

Intergenerational Knowledge Transfer

Food-as-Medicine Literacy

School and Community Wellness Frameworks

Nutrition Literacy and Food Literacy

Educational Technology for Wellness Dissemination

Monitoring and Evaluation of Food-as-Medicine Programmes

Policy Recommendations for Wellness Education

Intended Audience

Teachers; Students; Parents; School Leaders; Teacher Educators; Curriculum Planners; Community Educators; Wellness Facilitators; Health Educators; Nutrition Educators; Researchers; IKS Scholars; NGOs; Public Health Education Professionals; Community Workers; Food Literacy Educators; School Health Programme Coordinators; Value Education Professionals; Life Skills Educators; Educational Institutions; Community Organisations; General Readers interested in Indian Knowledge Systems, Ayurveda, nutrition literacy, mindful eating, community wellness, and school-based wellness education.

Disclaimer

This book is intended strictly for educational, cultural, conceptual, and wellness-literacy purposes. It discusses Indian Knowledge Systems, Ayurveda, Ahara, food practices, herbs, traditional diets, gut health, mindful eating, preventive wellness, community health, and educational frameworks. The content should not be treated as medical advice, clinical guidance, diagnosis, treatment, prescription, or a substitute for consultation with qualified healthcare professionals. Readers should not begin, stop, modify, or replace any medical treatment, medicine, therapy, diet plan, supplement, herbal preparation, detoxification routine, fasting practice, exercise routine, Yoga practice, or wellness intervention solely on the basis of this book.

Any person with a medical condition, chronic illness, allergy, pregnancy, lactation, mental health concern, digestive disorder, metabolic disease, cardiovascular condition, kidney or liver condition, or medication use should seek advice from a qualified medical practitioner before applying any wellness practice. Children, adolescents, elderly persons, pregnant women, and persons with special health needs require additional caution. Herbal products, traditional formulations, spices, fasting routines, and detoxification practices may interact with medicines or produce adverse effects in some individuals. Quality, dosage, source, preparation method, and individual constitution matter significantly.

The book does not claim to cure, treat, prevent, or diagnose any disease. References to traditional uses, wellness practices, or food-based approaches should be understood as educational discussions, not clinical recommendations. In case of medical emergency, severe symptoms, unexplained illness, or worsening health condition, readers should seek immediate medical care from qualified professionals. The author and publisher shall not be held responsible for any direct or indirect consequence arising from the use, misuse, interpretation, or application of the information contained in this book.

Abstract / Description

This book presents an Indian Knowledge System-based framework for wellness education in schools and communities. It argues that health education must go beyond disease prevention, hygiene awareness, and nutritional information to include cultural understanding, food literacy, ethical consumption, mindful eating, daily routines, community health, ecological responsibility, and holistic well-being.

The book draws upon Ayurveda, Ahara, traditional food practices, regional food cultures, community health, mindful eating, gut health, food ethics, and food-as-medicine literacy. It interprets these themes in accessible educational language for teachers, students, parents, curriculum planners, wellness educators, community educators, and general readers.

The chapters examine Ayurveda and the philosophy of health, Ahara as the Indian science of food and health, the kitchen as the first health school, gut health and traditional diets, regional food traditions and community wellness, food ethics and mindful eating, community health through traditional food systems, and an educational framework for food-as-medicine literacy.

The book follows a conceptual, educational, and synthesis-oriented approach. It is not a clinical trial report, medical guideline, pharmacological manual, or systematic review. Its purpose is to build a structured wellness-literacy resource that can support classroom discussions, school wellness activities, food-literacy modules, community awareness programmes, and interdisciplinary education.

The book is intended for educational, cultural, conceptual, and wellness-literacy purposes only. It does not replace medical diagnosis, clinical treatment, nutritional prescription, psychological counselling, Ayurvedic treatment, Yoga therapy, or professional healthcare advice.

Table of Contents

  1. Chapter 1: Ayurveda and the Philosophy of Health
  2. Understanding Ayurveda: A Holistic Approach
  3. Origins and Evolution Through the Ages
  4. Foundational Concepts and Theoretical Framework
  5. Food as Medicine: The Ayurvedic Perspective
  6. The Role of Doshas in Health
  7. Community Wellness and Ayurveda
  8. Ayurvedic Practices for Daily Life
  9. Integrating Ayurveda with Modern Medicine
  10. Mental Wellbeing in Ayurveda
  11. Ayurvedic Herbs and Their Benefits
  12. Case Studies: Success Stories from Indian Communities
  13. Challenges Facing Ayurveda Today
  14. Future of Ayurveda in India
  15. Chapter 2: Ahara: Indian Science of Food and Health
  16. Introduction to Ahara and Its Importance in Indian Culture
  17. Definition of Ahara
  18. Historical Overview
  19. Role of Ahara in Traditional Indian Medicine
  20. The Philosophy Behind Ahara
  21. The Nutritional Elements of Ahara
  22. Ahara and Seasonal Eating
  23. Ahara in Relation to Mental Health
  24. Culinary Practices in Ahara
  25. Ahara’s Influence on Physical Health
  26. Contemporary Understanding of Ahara
  27. Challenges in Practicing Ahara Today
  28. The Future of Ahara
  29. Conclusion: Embracing Ahara for Holistic Health
  30. Chapter 3: Kitchen as the First Health School
  31. Understanding the Concept of the Kitchen as a Health School
  32. The Impact of Cooking on Food Choices
  33. Nutritional Education Begins at Home
  34. The Role of Local Ingredients in Health
  35. Importance of Cooking Techniques for Health
  36. Meal Planning: A Healthier Lifestyle Choice
  37. Kitchen Safety and Hygiene Practices
  38. Utilizing Herbs and Spices for Health Benefits
  39. Building Healthy Habits with Mindful Cooking
  40. The Role of Kitchen Design in Promoting Health
  41. Cooking Together: Strengthening Family Bonds
  42. The Influence of Technology on Kitchen Health Education
  43. Chapter 4: Gut Health and Traditional Diets
  44. Understanding Gut Health: Importance and Impact
  45. Traditional Diets Across India: An Overview
  46. Probiotics and Prebiotics in Traditional Diets
  47. Fermented Foods: A Cultural Staple
  48. The Role of Fiber in Gut Health
  49. Traditional Cooking Methods and Gut Health
  50. The Role of Spices in Gut Health
  51. Connection Between Traditional Diets and Gut Microbiome
  52. The Influence of Ayurveda on Gut Health
  53. Modern Diet Trends vs. Traditional Diets
  54. Conclusion: Embracing Traditional Diets for Better Gut Health
  55. Chapter 5: Regional Food Traditions and Community Wellness
  56. Introduction to Regional Food Traditions
  57. The Connection Between Food and Wellness
  58. Famous Regional Cuisines of India
  59. Food Security and Community Wellness
  60. Influence of Festivals on Food Traditions
  61. Sustainability in Regional Food Practices
  62. Role of Women in Food Traditions
  63. Challenges Facing Regional Food Traditions
  64. Conclusion: A Collective Future for Food and Wellness
  65. Chapter 6: Food Ethics and Mindful Eating
  66. Understanding Food Ethics: An Overview
  67. The Importance of Mindful Eating
  68. Cultural Perspectives on Food Ethics in India
  69. Sustainable Food Practices
  70. The Role of Animal Welfare
  71. Food Security and Equity
  72. The Intersection of Health and Food Ethics
  73. Community and Food Ethics
  74. Mindful Eating Practices
  75. Future of Food Ethics and Mindful Eating in India
  76. Chapter 7: Community Health through Traditional Food Systems
  77. Understanding Traditional Food Systems in India
  78. The Importance of Community Health in India
  79. Nutritional Benefits of Traditional Foods
  80. Cultural Significance of Traditional Food Systems
  81. Promoting Sustainable Agricultural Practices
  82. Addressing Malnutrition Through Traditional Foods
  83. Reviving Forgotten Traditional Recipes
  84. Role of Women in Traditional Food Systems
  85. Government and NGO Initiatives
  86. Challenges Facing Traditional Food Systems
  87. Fostering Intergenerational Knowledge Transfer
  88. Future Directions for Community Health
  89. Chapter 8: Educational Framework for Food-as-Medicine Literacy
  90. Understanding Food-as-Medicine Concepts
  91. Importance of Food-as-Medicine Literacy
  92. Target Audience for Educational Framework
  93. Components of the Framework
  94. Integration with Nutritional Guidelines
  95. Teaching Strategies for Effective Learning
  96. Collaboration with Stakeholders
  97. Dissemination of Educational Materials
  98. Challenges and Solutions in Implementation
  99. Monitoring and Evaluating Effectiveness
  100. Policy Recommendations for Food-as-Medicine Literacy
  101. Future Directions and Trends
  102. Final Conclusion
  103. References / Bibliography
  104. Suggested Further Reading
  105. About the Author
  106. About the Publisher / Imprint

Bibliographic Metadata

How to Cite

Singh, H. (2026). IKS-based wellness education for schools and communities. EP Downloads, an imprint of Bookskart World. ISBN 978-81-995662-8-6.

Copyright and Rights

Copyright © 2026 Dr. Harshvardhan Singh. Published by BOOKSKART WORLD under the EP DOWNLOADS imprint. All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted, distributed, or used in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, digital storage, online sharing, internet distribution, artificial intelligence training datasets, or otherwise—without prior written permission from the copyright holder and publisher, except for brief quotations used for academic review, research, criticism, or educational reference with proper acknowledgement.

The views expressed in this book are those of the author. The publisher and imprint have taken care to present the material in good faith; however, they do not accept responsibility for errors, omissions, or consequences arising from the use of the information contained in this publication.

License: All Rights Reserved. This publication is not released under a Creative Commons or open reuse license. Reproduction, redistribution, adaptation, translation, commercial use, institutional use, digital transmission, online sharing, digital archiving, artificial intelligence training use, or reuse of the full text requires prior written permission from the author and publisher. Brief quotations may be used for academic review, research, criticism, or educational reference with proper acknowledgement. License Type Restricted / All Rights Reserved License URL Not applicable / No open license assigned.