Category: Education

  • Indian Institute of Management Kashipur to Host MERC 2026 on “Reimagining Management in an Era of Poly-Crisis”

    Indian Institute of Management Kashipur to Host MERC 2026 on “Reimagining Management in an Era of Poly-Crisis”

     New Delhi [India], May 26: The Indian Institute of Management Kashipur is set to host the 6th edition of the Management Education and Research Colloquium (MERC 2026) from 29th to 31st May 2026 at its campus. As the flagship doctoral research conference of IIM Kashipur, MERC 2026 will bring together doctoral scholars, academicians, researchers, and industry experts from across the country to deliberate upon emerging challenges and transformations in the field of management.

    The theme for this year’s colloquium, “Reimagining Management in an Era of Poly-Crisis,” reflects the growing need for organisations and institutions to rethink traditional approaches to management amid simultaneous global challenges such as geopolitical instability, climate emergencies, technological disruptions, and economic uncertainties. The conference aims to encourage interdisciplinary research and discussions focusing on resilience, sustainability, innovation, adaptability, and responsible management practices.

    MERC 2026 will provide an immersive academic platform featuring keynote addresses, paper presentations, workshops, networking opportunities, and campus engagement activities. The colloquium seeks to foster meaningful academic dialogue while equipping emerging researchers with contemporary perspectives and practical insights relevant to modern management research and practice. The conference will also recognise outstanding research contributions through Best Paper Awards.

    The conference will feature distinguished keynote speakers including Prof. Anand Nair, Professor & Jeff Bornstein Faculty Fellow at Northeastern University; Prof. G Sridhar, Professor at IIM Kozhikode; Prof. R. Edward Freeman, Bachand University Professor, Olsson Professor,and Academic Director at the University of Virginia Darden School of Business; Prof. Jeffrey M. Wooldridge, University Distinguished Professor of Economics at Michigan State University; Prof. Sushanta Kumar Mishra, Professor at IIM Bangalore.

    MERC 2026 will host research discussions across multiple domains including Communications, Economics, Finance and Accounting, Information Technology and Systems, Marketing, Operations Management and Decision Sciences, Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management, Public Policy and Governance, and Strategy and Entrepreneurship.

    The colloquium is being organised under the patronage of Prof. Neeraj Dwivedi, Director, IIM Kashipur. The Advisory Committee for MERC 2026 includes Prof. Sabyasachi Patra and Prof. Vivek Roy as Colloquium Convenors, along with Prof. Jagadish Prasad Sahu, Prof. Ratikant Bhaskar, and Prof. Thasni T.

    Through MERC 2026, IIM Kashipur continues its commitment towards strengthening academic research, fostering intellectual collaboration, and creating impactful discourse on the evolving landscape of management education and practice.

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  • eCampus Edu reports regional trends among online learners in India; notes rise in second degrees and ROI focus

    eCampus Edu reports regional trends among online learners in India; notes rise in second degrees and ROI focus

    New Delhi [India], May 26: As online education sheds its stopgap image and becomes a career-driven choice, eCampus Edu has released fresh insights drawn from thousands of student interactions across India and the Middle East.

    The platform’s latest data points to three clear shifts: a sharp rise in working professionals enrolling for second degrees, a growing preference for programmes with measurable return on investment (ROI) over brand names alone, and accelerating demand for international online degrees.

    Regional trends among Indian learners

    According to eCampus Edu, student preferences vary distinctly by region and professional context. Learners in different parts of India show different priorities – from strong demand for MBA programs and government-recognized degrees in some areas, to higher willingness to invest in tech-focused courses such as Data Science and Information Technology in others.

    Meanwhile, Indian professionals based in the Middle East focus primarily on career upgrades and flexible learning formats that fit around demanding work schedules.

    Top three most in-demand courses

    Across all regions, the platform identified three clear leaders in student interest:

    1. Online MBA– especially specialisations in Marketing, Human Resources, and Data Analytics
    2. Doctorate of Business Administration (DBA)for working professionals
    3. Certificate programs in Generative AI, Machine Learning, and HR Analytics

    Three surprising trends of the past year

    eCampus Edu noted three significant developments over the last 12 months:

    • A notable surge in working professionals pursuing a second degree
    • Rising demand for international online programmes from universities outside India
    • A clear shift where students now prioritize placement records and ROI over brand recognition alone

    Who is the online learner today?

    The average age of a student seeking an online degree ranges from 22 to 38 years. The majority are:

    • Working professionals
    • Career switchers
    • Diploma holders upgrading their qualifications
    • Indian employees based overseas

    Understanding the ‘50% average hike’ claim

    eCampus Edu’s statement of a 50% average salary hike post-program is based on internal student feedback and salary progression data from partner universities. The company clarifies that the asterisk accompanying this figure means results vary by experience, industry, and role. The figure typically applies to students who complete the programme and actively switch roles or receive a promotion.

    What partner universities value most

    According to eCampus Edu, its university partners value three things from the platform:

    • High-quality, pre-qualified leads that reduce wasted outreach
    • Better student-programme fit, leading to lower dropout rates
    • Stronger conversion rates achieved through a combination of counselling and AI matching

    The company currently partners with multiple UGC-approved Indian universities and select international institutions, with growing interest from globally recognised universities including US and European B‑schools.

    How AI and performance marketing work together

    eCampus Edu uses a blend of AI and performance marketing to help universities reach the right students. The AI filters and segments students based on eligibility, interests, budget and career goals, ensuring universities receive pre-qualified leads rather than generic inquiries. Targeted campaigns across platforms like Meta and Google then reach the intended audience. Advisors nurture these leads, improving conversion rates and ensuring a strong match between students and programmes.

    Advisor backgrounds

    The platform’s advisors include experienced education counsellors and industry experts with backgrounds in higher education admissions, career counselling, EdTech growth, and marketing.

    Vision for the next 2–3 years

    “Our vision is to become a leading AI-powered ecosystem – from course discovery to career advancement,” a company representative said.

     “We aim to help working professionals in India and the Middle East make smarter decisions through personalised recommendations, career insights, and expert guidance. By strengthening partnerships with universities and expanding our reach, we plan to build a complete ecosystem that makes quality online education more accessible, efficient, and outcome-driven.”

    Online education in India: the big picture

    According to eCampus Edu, online education in India is rapidly becoming mainstream and career-focused. The company points to stronger employer acceptance, increased demand from working professionals for flexible, skill-based learning, and visible improvements by universities in programme quality and student support.

    “In the coming years, AI personalisation, outcome-based learning, and global access will enable learners to upskill continuously and stay competitive in a fast-changing job market,”the representative added.

    For more info visit: https://ecampusapp.com

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  • PW Skills Launches PW Skillshala: A Network of Offline Upskilling Centres Across India

    PW Skills Launches PW Skillshala: A Network of Offline Upskilling Centres Across India

    Noida (Uttar Pradesh) [India], May 25: Education company PhysicsWallah (PW) has announced the launch of PW Skillshala, a dedicated offline learning initiative under its professional upskilling vertical, PW Skills. The announcement made during a launch event marks a strategic expansion into physical classroom learning with 14 offline centres across cities such as Noida, Patna, Lucknow, Indore, Pune and others. Currently courses around Data Analytics, Data Science, Full Stack Development, Data Structures & Algorithms and Digital Marketing are being offered.

    According to the India Skills Report 2026*, the national employability rate stands at 56.35%. While this marks an upward trajectory from 54.81% in 2025, it also underscores that nearly 44% of educated youth entering the job market remain unemployable without immediate vocational intervention. Furthermore, the Union Budget 2026-27 identifies skill development as a cross-sectoral priority to utilise the country’s significant working-age demographic, noting significant talent gaps in technical sectors such as generative AI, data engineering, and automation.

    An industry-focused panel discussion was organised at the launch event, which featured Gopal Sharma (COO, PW), Satish Sharma (CMO, PW), Rohit Negi (ex-SDE at Uber and founder of CoderArmy) and Mehak Suri (Global tech consultant), alongside PW Skillshala faculty members Adfar Rasheed, Raghav Garg, and Tushar Jha. The panel analysed modern job market paradigms, focusing on the current job market landscape, how different skills align with emerging job roles, and the rise of AI-enabled jobs, while underscoring why AI is expected to augment human software workflows rather than cause direct job displacements.

    Gopal Sharma, Chief Operating Officer, PhysicsWallah (PW), said, “Our core focus has consistently centred on delivering quality and accessible education at scale. The introduction of PW Skillshala marks an important step forward as we complement our digital ecosystem with the distinct advantages of physical learning. In a traditional classroom setting, students benefit from immediate peer-to-peer collaboration, real-time networking, and the accountability that comes with a structured, community-driven environment. As advancements in AI continue to reshape workforce expectations, providing practical, hands-on environments with direct mentorship becomes essential.

    Additionally, the launch event also witnessed industry experts hosting a live resume review session, providing the audience with data-backed insights into institutional hiring criteria and profile optimisation techniques.

    *Jointly published by ETS, the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), and the Association of Indian Universities (AIU)

    About PhysicsWallah (PW)

    PhysicsWallah Limited (PW), an education platform, was founded in 2020 by Alakh Pandey and Prateek Maheshwari. Headquartered in Noida, Uttar Pradesh, PW aims to facilitate education through online, offline, and hybrid platforms. Initially launched as a YouTube channel in 2014, PW now offers education to students through its native app, tech-enabled offline and hybrid centers, and YouTube channels. PW’s offerings span various educational segments, including test preparation, a skilling vertical, coaching for higher education, and facilitating education abroad, with programs available in multiple vernacular languages.

    PhysicsWallah Limited was listed on the National Stock Exchange of India Limited (NSE) and BSE Limited (Bombay Stock Exchange) on November 18, 2025.

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  • Sarvajanik Education Society and Sarvajanik University Strengthen Student Learning with Advanced Centralized Library Initiative

    Sarvajanik Education Society and Sarvajanik University Strengthen Student Learning with Advanced Centralized Library Initiative

    Surat (Gujarat) [India], May 25: Sarvajanik University has taken a significant step towards strengthening academic resources and promoting quality education through its Centralized Library initiative under Sarvajanik Education Society – Sarvajanik University (SES–SU). The University Central Library now serves as a comprehensive academic resource centre catering to the needs of students, faculty members, and researchers across all constituent institutes.

    The Central Library provides access to an extensive collection of print and digital learning resources of more than 3 lakh books to each student irrespective of their faculty of admission. For example, a student of the Engineering faculty can have access to the library of the Arts Faculty and vice versa. This will ensure continuous support for teaching, learning, and research activities. The library undertakes systematic acquisition, cataloguing, organization, and maintenance of academic collections while continuously upgrading its services and infrastructure. Special emphasis is being placed on improving user experience, expanding digital accessibility, and fostering an innovative, learner-centric environment.

    As part of this initiative, the fourteen institutional libraries functioning under SES–SU have been interconnected through an integrated library network. This network enables users to access bibliographical databases and facilitates seamless sharing and procurement of books and reading materials among all participating libraries.

    With this centralized system, students of Sarvajanik Education Society – Sarvajanik University can conveniently access and borrow resources available across the networked libraries. The initiative significantly expands the availability of academic materials by providing students with access to a wide range of textbooks, reference books, journals, research publications, and competitive examination resources.

    The centralized library network also promotes interdisciplinary learning by allowing students to explore resources beyond their parent institutes. It further supports project work, dissertations, internships, and research activities through improved access to scholarly literature and digital databases.

    Shri Ashish Vakil, Chairman, Sarvajanik Education Society and President, Sarvajanik University, stated that the initiative aims to encourage a culture of reading, self-learning, and academic excellence by ensuring equitable access to quality information resources for all students across the Sarvajanik Education Society’s colleges.

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  • Alakh Pandey Supports Grassroot’s Free Education, Funds Digital Library in Village for Competitive Exam Aspirants

    Alakh Pandey Supports Grassroot’s Free Education, Funds Digital Library in Village for Competitive Exam Aspirants

    Noida (Uttar Pradesh) [India], May 23: Alakh Pandey, popularly known as PhysicsWallah or Alakh Sir, has set up a Free digital library at Sant Vinova School in Vaidpura Village, Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh, as a step towards transforming access to quality education in rural communities. Established in his personal capacity, to support students preparing for competitive examinations, including engineering, medical, and other Exam-wise, students who want to study can access both books and online courses that are available. Following the support, the facility has been equipped with over 30 laptops, over a thousand books, specialised VR headsets that utilise AR and VR content to simplify complex scientific theories for students, with a curriculum featuring interactive games and immersive simulations, particularly for complex subjects like human anatomy and space science, making abstract concepts tangible and engaging.

    The digital library also provides students with free access to PW’s online educational content and study resources, enabling learners from the village to prepare for competitive exams without financial or connectivity barriers. The facility will remain open daily from 8 AM to 8 PM, and any student from the village can access the library free of cost.

    Speaking at the inauguration of the Digital Library, Alakh Sir said, “I believe that every student deserves a fair shot at success, regardless of whether they have a good internet connection or a computer at home. By setting up this digital library, I want to make sure these students have everything they need to study. It’s my personal goal to bring technology and books directly to them so they can dream big and achieve their goals. In the future, I want to open more Free digital libraries across India.”

    The initiative reflects an effort to strengthen grassroots education by creating accessible learning spaces for students in underserved regions. This digital library at Vaidpura is envisioned as a replicable model for rural education access across the country, one that holistically bridges gaps in exposure, connectivity, infrastructure, and resources, and demonstrates that a single individual, driven by the right intent, can potentially become a turning point for an entire generation of students regardless of their background.

    About PhysicsWallah (PW)

    PhysicsWallah Limited (PW), an education platform, was founded in 2020 by Alakh Pandey and Prateek Maheshwari. Headquartered in Noida, Uttar Pradesh, PW aims to facilitate education through online, offline, and hybrid platforms. Initially launched as a YouTube channel in 2014, PW now offers education to students through its native app, tech-enabled offline and hybrid centers, and YouTube channels. PW’s offerings span various educational segments, including test preparation, a skilling vertical, coaching for higher education, and facilitating education abroad, with programs available in multiple vernacular languages.

    PhysicsWallah Limited was listed on the National Stock Exchange of India Limited (NSE) and BSE Limited (Bombay Stock Exchange) on November 18, 2025.

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  • Choosing Skill-Based Learning and Practical Industry Exposure Over Traditional Education Models at MIT University, Sikkim 

    Choosing Skill-Based Learning and Practical Industry Exposure Over Traditional Education Models at MIT University, Sikkim 

    Gangtok (Sikkim) [India], May 23: Thousands of students across India spend hours comparing universities online, checking approvals, reading reviews, and verifying degree validity before taking admission. However, many students still remain confused because most information available online is either overly promotional or incomplete. Among the universities gaining attention in 2026 is MIT University Sikkim, especially among students looking for modern, skill-based, and industry-focused education.

    Vocational and Work Integrated Learning Programs (WILP) Becoming the New Future of Higher Education

    Education experts believe Vocational and Work Integrated Learning Programs (WILP) are becoming far more career-focused than many traditional online and distance education models. Modern industries now prefer students with practical skills, internship exposure, live project experience, and real workplace understanding instead of only theoretical learning.

    Unlike old-style distance education trends, Vocational and WILP programs focus on:

    • Practical training
    • Industry exposure
    • Skill development
    • Live projects
    • Internship opportunities
    • Career readiness

    Experts say companies today increasingly value employability and practical competency, which is why industry-oriented education models are growing rapidly under NEP 2020 and Skill India initiatives.

    MIT University Sikkim is among the universities focusing strongly on NEP 2020-based curriculum, Vocational education, and Work Integrated Learning Programs (WILP) designed around modern industry demands in fields such as Artificial Intelligence, Data Science, Cyber Security, Cloud Computing, and Business Analytics.

    Education analysts also clarify that NAAC is mainly a quality assessment system, while the legal validity of a university depends on UGC recognition. MIT University Sikkim is recognised under Section 2(f) of the UGC Act, and experts say its degrees remain valid for higher education and employment opportunities as per applicable regulations.

    Students today are increasingly choosing universities that focus on future careers, practical learning, and industry readiness rather than only traditional classroom-based education models.

    UGC Recognition and Degree Validity?

    One of the most searched questions about MIT University Sikkim is whether the university is officially recognised. According to available information, the university is recognised by the Government of India under Section 2(f) of the UGC Act. Students can independently verify the university listing under the name “Management and Information Technology University” in Sikkim.

    Education experts say students should always verify:

    • Legal recognition
    • Degree validity
    • Curriculum quality
    • Student support systems
    • Fee transparency
    • Industry exposure

    before taking admission in any university.

    Why Does the University’s NAAC Accreditation Matter?

    Many students believe NAAC accreditation automatically increases the value of a degree, but education experts clarify that the legal validity of a degree mainly depends on UGC recognition and official government approval.

    NAAC is mainly a quality assessment system that evaluates infrastructure, curriculum, teaching standards, governance, and academic systems. Newly established universities usually require operational years or graduating batches before becoming eligible for NAAC accreditation.

    Experts also note that universities following NEP 2020 guidelines already work on many academic quality standards related to curriculum structure, vocational learning, skill-based education, internships, industry exposure, and student support systems that are also important parts of NAAC compliance.

    Education analysts say many universities significantly increase their fee structures after receiving NAAC accreditation because of infrastructure expansion, branding, and operational costs. However, the legal validity of degrees remains the same for universities officially recognised under UGC regulations.

    MIT University Sikkim, recognised under Section 2(f) of the UGC Act, is currently focusing on NEP 2020-based curriculum, vocational education, WILP programs, practical learning, internships, and industry-oriented education while progressing toward future NAAC accreditation eligibility.

    Currently, only around 40% of universities and less than 20% of colleges in India hold NAAC accreditation, while the new education framework aims to expand accreditation coverage across the higher education sector.

    Why Students Shift Towards Skill-Based and Industry-Focused Education?

    Education experts believe student priorities are changing rapidly in 2026. Instead of focusing only on old university branding or infrastructure, students are now comparing institutions based on employability, internships, practical learning, and industry-linked curriculum.

    MIT University Sikkim is promoting a practical education model that includes:

    • Mandatory internships
    • Live industry projects
    • Workshops and certifications
    • Industry exposure
    • Skill-based learning
    • NEP 2020-focused curriculum

    The university is particularly focusing on emerging sectors such as Artificial Intelligence, Cloud Computing, and Data Analytics, areas where hiring demand in India is expected to remain strong during FY 2026–27.

    Why No Placement Records Yet?

    Placement remains an important factor for students and parents. However, education experts explain that MIT University Sikkim admitted its first batch recently, so no graduating batch has completed studies yet. Experts say placement data before graduation would not present a realistic picture.

    Instead, students are advised to evaluate the university’s career preparation system, including internships, mentorship, industry exposure, certifications, and project-based learning. The university is focusing on making students job-ready from the beginning through practical and skill-based education models.

    Leadership and Academic Background: Attracting Student Attention

    Education analysts say the leadership behind MIT University Sikkim is also becoming a major discussion point among students. Vice Chancellor Dr. Deepak Kher reportedly brings more than 36 years of academic experience, along with extensive research and institutional development work.

    The educational ecosystem associated with the university also claims a 17-year background in higher education guidance and career mentorship. According to available information, students linked with this broader educational network have reportedly secured opportunities in companies such as Amazon, Google, TCS, Deloitte, Infosys, Wipro, Capgemini, and Cognizant.

    Experts believe mentorship systems, industry exposure, and long-term career guidance are becoming increasingly important for students selecting modern universities in 2026.

    Emerging as a Preferred Education Destination

    MIT University, located in Namchi, South Sikkim, is attracting students from states including Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Assam, and West Bengal.

    Education experts believe many students and parents now prefer peaceful academic environments with lower living costs instead of highly crowded metro cities. Lower expenses, safer surroundings, and distraction-free learning environments are becoming important factors influencing admission decisions.

    Reports suggest the university received strong inquiry numbers shortly after opening admissions for the 2026 academic session, reflecting growing interest in modern universities offering industry-oriented education and affordable academic ecosystems.

    Experts Advise For Students In India

    Education experts believe Vocational and Work Integrated Learning Programs (WILP) are becoming more career-focused than traditional online and distance education models because industries now prefer practical skills, internships, and real industry exposure.

    MIT University Sikkim is focusing on NEP 2020-based curriculum, vocational education, skill development, and industry-oriented learning in emerging fields like Artificial Intelligence, Data Science, and Cyber Security.

    Experts also clarify that NAAC is mainly a quality assessment system, while university degree validity depends on UGC recognition. MIT University Sikkim is recognised under Section 2(f) of the UGC Act, making its degrees valid for higher education and employment opportunities as per applicable regulations.

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  • 1500 models displayed at Spring 2026 Semester End Exhibition organized by School of Environmental Design and Architecture (SEDA), Navrachana University, Vadodara

    1500 models displayed at Spring 2026 Semester End Exhibition organized by School of Environmental Design and Architecture (SEDA), Navrachana University, Vadodara

    Spring 2026 Semester End Exhibition organized by School of Environmental Design and Architecture (SEDA), Navrachana University, Vadodara

    Vadodara (Gujarat) [India], May 23:The Spring 2026 Semester End Exhibition, organized by the School of Environmental Design and Architecture (SEDA), Navrachana University, showcases the work of three design programmes: Bachelor of Architecture (BArch.), BDesign (Interior), and BDesign (Product Design and Visual Communication). Around 500 students’ works are displayed in this Spring Semester Exhibition, commemorating their four-month-long journey of learning in areas focused on studio, design, construction, history, visualization, representation, theory, research, workshops, electives, and more. Approximately 1,500 models and around 2,000 drawings are on display, celebrating design and architecture.

    Notable projects on display include the upcycling and recycling of everyday materials, introducing the idea of ‘repurposing’ raw materials into usable, environment-friendly products. Another project is anchored in sensitizing students to designing ecologically responsive architecture in ecologically sensitive areas. The exhibited work also showcases projects addressing issues and complexities in urban areas, such as the lack of public spaces for communities, missing footpaths, and more. These projects have cultivated ideas around designing public spaces between and around buildings, emphasizing the improvement of the quality of public spaces.

    “This year’s Spring Semester Exhibition showcases excellent work undertaken by our students of SEDA, exhibiting some of the finest and most relevant projects of our time,” said Smt. Tejal Amin, Chairperson, Navrachana Education Society.

    “Through students’ works, it is evident that the projects undertaken this semester have generated curiosity, everyday awareness, and sensitivity towards repurposing, ecology, society, and people-centric public spaces,” said Prof. Pratyush Shankar, Provost, Navrachana University and Dean, SEDA.

    This exhibition will open on Wednesday, 20th May, at 5:30 pm and will remain open to the public on Thursday, 21st May 2026, from 10:00 am to 6:00 pm. A guest lecture by Venkat Srinivasan, founding member and co-director of the Milli Archives Foundation, Bangalore, has also been organized on 20th May 2026. The exhibition presents an excellent opportunity for aspiring students intending to join design programmes to gain better insight into the type of work undertaken in these programmes.

    For more information – https://nuv.ac.in/schools/environmental-design-and-architecture/

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  • Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology, Delhi, launches Post Graduate Diploma Programme in Interaction Design & UX

    Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology, Delhi, launches Post Graduate Diploma Programme in Interaction Design & UX

    A 12-month blended programme to equip learners with advanced capabilities in UX design, interaction design, and emerging experience technologies

    New Delhi [India], May 21: Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology Delhi (IIIT-Delhi), in collaboration with TimesPro, has announced the launch of the inaugural cohort of its Post Graduate Diploma Programme in Interaction Design & UX. Conceived as a 12-month, industry-aligned offering, the programme aims to develop strong capabilities in design thinking, user experience principles, and contemporary interaction design, while helping learners build applied expertise in emerging domains such as augmented and virtual reality, wearable interfaces, and generative AI.

    Designed and delivered by IIIT-Delhi’s faculty members and researchers, the programme follows a blended format that combines live online learning with campus immersion. It introduces learners to interdisciplinary frameworks spanning design, technology, and human factors, enabling them to create intuitive, inclusive, and meaningful experiences across digital products, connected devices, and next-generation platforms. The programme is structured to support both career progression and career transition in the evolving design and innovation ecosystem.

    The market signals behind this shift remain compelling. The AR/VR in Education market is projected to expand to USD 22.5 billion by 2030, reflecting a CAGR of 41.2% during the forecast period. A Forrester study has indicated that a well-designed user interface can improve conversion rates by as much as 200%, while a stronger UX design approach can increase them by up to 400%. At the same time, the global UX industry is expected to reach USD 32.95 billion, reinforcing the rising strategic importance of user-centred design across sectors.

    Speaking at the announcement of the first batch, Pragma Kar and Richa Gupta, Assistant Professors, Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology Delhi, observed, “At IIIT Delhi, we view interaction design and user experience as critical disciplines shaping the future of digital innovation. With this programme, we wanted to create a learning journey that is thoughtful, contemporary, and firmly rooted in real-world practice. It brings together design, research, and emerging technologies in a way that can help learners build not just skills, but a sharper, more meaningful design perspective.”

    Sharing his thoughts, Sridhar Nagarajachar, Business Head – Executive Education, TimesPro, said, “As digital products grow more immersive, intelligent and human-centred, the demand for professionals who can bridge design, technology and user behaviour continues to rise. Through this programme, learners will gain rigorous academic exposure and applied industry-oriented learning that can help them move into high-growth design roles and contribute meaningfully to product, platform, and experience innovation.”

    The programme is well-suited for aspiring UI/UX and interaction designers, product designers and developers, engineers seeking to move into UX, creative professionals considering a career shift, and product managers or founders looking to strengthen their design capabilities. It prepares learners for roles such as UI/UX Designer, Interaction Designer, Product Designer, UX Researcher and AR/VR Experience Designer, among others.

    TimesPro will deliver the learning experience through its advanced Interactive Learning platform in direct-to-device mode. The curriculum is organised into six modules: Design Foundation; Designing User Interfaces and User Experiences – Applied; Human Factors; Evaluation Methodologies; Interaction Design and Emerging Technology & New Media, followed by a Capstone Project. Over the course of 12 months, learners will engage with more than 350 hours of live sessions, recorded content, projects, assignments, and capstone work. The programme also includes a three-day campus immersion at IIIT-Delhi at the end of the academic journey.

    Participants will gain exposure to leading tools and technologies such as Arduino, Unreal Engine, Android Studio, and Figma, alongside conceptual and practical grounding in areas including AR/VR, generative AI, brain-computer interface (BCI), and wearable technology.

    Candidates with a bachelor’s degree and at least 50% marks or equivalent 5 CGPA will be considered for admission. Eligible backgrounds include B.Tech./B.E. (any discipline); B.Sc./BCA in Computer Science, Mathematics, Statistics, IT, Electronics, or related streams; BBA; MBBS; B.Des.; B.Arch.; BFA; related Bachelor’s degrees in Computer Science, IT, Economics, Bioinformatics, Design, or Architecture; and BA in Visual Communication, Visual Art, or allied disciplines

    About IIIT Delhi (Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology, Delhi)

    Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology, Delhi (IIIT Delhi) is a research-led, state-level university established by the Government of NCT of Delhi through a legislative act. It is empowered to conduct cutting-edge research, deliver high-quality educational programs, and grant academic degrees. The institute has rapidly grown into one of India’s leading comprehensive institutes in information technology and related interdisciplinary domains, with a strong emphasis on innovation, research excellence, and societal impact. IIIT Delhi is known for its internationally recognized faculty, robust research ecosystem, and strong industry linkages. The institute houses multiple research centres — including the Infosys Centre for Artificial Intelligence, Centre for Design and New Media, and Centre for Sustainable Mobility — that foster innovation, entrepreneurship, and real-world problem solving. The campus blends academic spaces with state-of-the-art labs, collaborative centres, incubation hubs, and sustainable infrastructure.

    About TimesPro

    TimesPro, established in 2013, is a leading Higher EdTech platform dedicated to empowering the career growth of aspiring learners by equipping them with skills to rise in a competitive world. TimesPro’s H.EdTech programmes are created to meet the rapidly changing industry requirements and have been blended with technology to make them accessible & affordable.

    TimesPro offers a variety of created and curated learning programmes across a range of categories, industries, and age groups. They include employment-oriented early career programmes across BFSI, e-Commerce, and technology sectors; executive education for working professionals in collaboration with premier educational institutions like IIMs and IITs; and organisational learning and development interventions at the corporate level. TimesPro also collaborates with India’s leading organisations across varied sectors to provide upskilling and reskilling solutions to boost employability and create a robust workforce. TimesPro is a Higher EdTech initiative by The Times Group.

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  • A Million Projects: The Proof Behind Ulipsu’s Skill Education Model

    A Million Projects: The Proof Behind Ulipsu’s Skill Education Model

    Bengaluru (Karnataka) [India], May 22: From a Class 6 student writing Python code in Chhattisgarh to a Grade 9 student building a predictive AI model in Tamil Nadu, Ulipsu has done something Indian edtech rarely achieves: it made skill education real, measurable, and embedded inside the school day — at scale.

    In a school in Chhattisgarh, a Class 6 student is not copying notes from a blackboard. She is writing Python code — her first programme — built from scratch, submitted through a platform, and assessed as a completed project. In Khammam, Telangana, a Class 7 student is presenting a design thinking solution to a problem she identified on the street where she lives. In Moga, Punjab, a Class 9 student is mapping cost structures, running financial simulations, and presenting outcomes to her class — not as a theoretical exercise, but as a live business model. And in Dammam, Saudi Arabia, students are following the same structured Ulipsu curriculum,  as a scheduled part of their school day.

    These are not pilot experiments. They are not demonstrations arranged for a visiting delegation. These are what happen on a regular school day throughout the year, in hundreds of schools, in twelve states, across three countries.

    Students enrolled in Ulipsu have completed a million hands-on projects. That number represents 358,072 students across 350-plus schools in 148 districts in 12 states. Behind every one of those projects is a child who did not simply sit through a lesson — a child who built something, documented it, and had it assessed.

    The Problem Nobody Was Solving

    India has 247 million school-going children (UDISE+ 2024–25). The National Education Policy 2020 explicitly mandates skill education across the curriculum. On paper, the direction has never been clearer. In practice, almost nothing happened.

    Most schools that tried to act on NEP 2020 ended up with something that looked like action but wasn’t. A single workshop. A one-term activity run by an enthusiastic teacher who left mid-year. No measurement, progression, or evidence of real change. The gap between policy intent and classroom reality remained as wide as ever.

    This was the gap that Sumanth Prabhu MG and Nikhil Bhaskar identified. In 2017, they founded Kidvento Education & Research Pvt. Ltd. in Mysuru with a straightforward thesis: if skill education is going to work inside Indian schools, it cannot exist as an extracurricular activity. It has to live inside the timetable, be assessed like a real subject, and be built with infrastructure sturdy enough to survive teacher turnover, academic pressure, and institutional inertia.

    Eight years on, the programme runs across 350-plus schools in 12 states and 3 countries.

    How Ulipsu Was Built to Stay

    Understanding why Ulipsu’s numbers are what they are requires understanding how the programme is actually structured. Ulipsu is not an after-school elective or a weekend enrichment activity. It is a scheduled subject embedded inside the school timetable, running from Class 1 through Class 10, with structured, grade-appropriate progression at every level.

    Every skill module follows the same three-stage structure. Students begin with interactive, gamified lessons that deliver real-time feedback. They move through game-based evaluations that test genuine understanding rather than rote recall. The third stage is the project — a hands-on challenge in which the student builds something, submits it through the platform, and has it reviewed by their teacher. At each stage, the platform records evidence. Nothing passes without documentation.

    The domain selection is not arbitrary. Students choose from 20 skill domains guided by a scientifically validated interest assessment based on the Holland Code framework — a globally recognised model for matching individuals with vocational and learning preferences. A child does not simply choose Coding because it sounds modern. The assessment surfaces genuine aptitude, which increases sustained engagement across terms and grade levels.

    For school leadership, Ulipsu provides live dashboards showing skill progression at the student, grade, and school level. The programme is aligned with NEP 2020 and NCF 2023, and carries international accreditation from ISTE and STEM.org.

    “We renewed because we could see the difference in how students approach problems — not just in Ulipsu classes but across subjects. The structured project format teaches them to think before they act, and that changes how they show up in every classroom.”

    — Principal Aswinni Priyaa J., Bharathiyar Hi-Tech School, Salem

    What a Million Projects Actually Look Like

    What does it look like  when a Grade 3 student, eight years old, builds a Scratch model to predict the outcome of a coin toss — not by luck, but by collecting historical examples, identifying patterns, and training the model on that data. That is the same underlying logic as any prediction system in industry. The difference is age and scale. The thinking is identical.

    Or consider a Grade 9 student in Mumbai, Maharashtra who built a predictive model that forecasts ice cream sales based on atmospheric temperature. She collected location-specific data, analysed the relationship between weather and consumer behaviour, and drew conclusions from the pattern. In Grade 8, a student in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh trained a supervised machine learning model to classify vehicles by colour, wheel count, and size — and understands what that phrase means in practice because she built the thing herself.

    These are not template exercises. Students work from a brief, hit errors, and resolve them before submission. The code either runs or it doesn’t.

    Across the Coding domain, more than 20,000 students built functional software — games with collision detection, Python functions that convert numbers to days of the week, task manager webpages built with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. One student in Grade 10 created a fully styled personal webpage, experimenting with layout and typography as a genuine design problem. Another, in a lower grade, wrote a Scratch game where a bow and arrow shoots at floating balloons — simple in premise, but requiring the student to programme movement, collision, and interaction logic from scratch.

    “My son came home one evening and explained to me what ‘collision detection’ means and why his game wasn’t working without it. I had no idea what he was talking about, but I could see he had figured something out. That is what I want from school.”

    — Parent of a Grade 6 student, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu

    In Design Thinking, close to 13,000 students identified problems from within their own communities and designed solutions for them. One student constructed and stress-tested two types of bridges — a beam bridge and a truss bridge — to understand how structure handles load differently under pressure. Another, in Grade 9, conceptualised a wearable device addressing urban environmental issues, thinking through user experience, functionality, and real-world viability before presenting the concept to classmates as a public, assessed deliverable. The final presentation is not optional. That is the point.

    Perhaps the most striking domain is Finance and Entrepreneurship. Beyond the thousands who completed full business simulations, tens of thousands more submitted startup and business concept designs — each requiring a student to define a customer, articulate a value proposition, and present the idea with genuine intent. One student in Grade 9 applied SWOT analysis to a real company, then mapped it onto a full Business Model Canvas, identifying value propositions, customer segments, and revenue streams as distinct analytical tasks. Another, in Grade 8, tracked family expenses and learned to distinguish between shared household costs and individual spending — a skill most adults apply imperfectly.

    “When I saw her expense tracking sheet, I was surprised. She had categorised everything correctly — groceries, transport, subscriptions — and then asked me why we spent more on one category than another. I did not have a good answer. The project had made her sharper about money than I expected at her age.”

    — Parent of a Grade 8 student, Bengaluru

    Across Life Skills, more than 216,000 structured sessions were completed — a figure that represents something genuinely unusual in any school programme: measurability applied to the unmeasurable. One student designed a personalised stress-relief strategy, mapping daily triggers and building coping techniques specific to her own patterns. Another created an emotion collage as a form of structured self-inquiry. The output is modest in scale. The habit of reflection it builds is not.

    “Life Skills is the subject I was most sceptical about when we signed the partnership. I expected vague worksheets. What I got were students who could articulate their emotions in structured terms and reference a strategy they had designed themselves. I did not expect the rigour.”

    — Principal, Saihat, Saudi Arabia

    Recognition, Certification, and Community

    Ulipsu has issued 128,644 certifications — digital badges and formal certificates tied directly to completed, assessed project work. These are not participation trophies. Each certificate represents work that was built, submitted, reviewed, and found to meet the standard. 250 students have been recognised as Ulipsu Skill Prodigies — the top-tier recognition awarded to students whose work stands out across the full cohort.

    The Skill Darbar community events tell a different kind of story. Ulipsu conducted more than 500 such events this year with its partner schools. More than 200,000 parents attended. These are the moments when skill education becomes visible to families — when a parent watches their child present a project and understands, perhaps for the first time, that something real is happening inside the school day.

    “She walked up to the front of the room and explained her entire project — what she built, why she built it, and what she would do differently. She is twelve. I have attended many school events, but I have never seen anything like that.”

    — Sunita Gupta, Parent, Skill Darbar event attendee, Delhi

    Why This Business Survived EdTech’s Worst Years

    Between 2022 and 2024, India’s EdTech sector collapsed at speed. Companies that had raised hundreds of crores on a consumer-scale hypothesis found themselves without customers. The discretionary learner turned out to be a fragile foundation. Courses went unsold. Subscriptions lapsed. The narrative that edtech would democratise learning met the harder reality of what families actually buy when household budgets tighten.

    Kidvento was building a structurally different company. Its customer was never the individual student. Its customer was the school — an institution with a budget cycle, a curriculum obligation, and a management structure that makes renewal decisions based on outcomes, not marketing. The churn risk is categorically different. So is the relationship.

    That structural distinction is why Kidvento enters FY 2026–27 as an EBITDA-positive business, with 2.5x growth in school bookings, expanding government orders, and active international expansion. The company is growing from ₹9 crore in FY 2024–25 toward a ₹20 crore target for FY 2025–26. It has raised a total of $6 million in capital, holds a GEM portal rating of 4.7 across more than 800 government orders, and is now active in Saudi Arabia and Qatar, with Africa and Southeast Asia targeted as the next expansion markets.

    The Runway Ahead

    Ulipsu is in 350-plus schools today. India has 1.5 million.

    The next phase involves government schools and international markets — both of which represent a different order of scale entirely. For students from first-generation learner households, where after-school enrichment is simply not available, the embedded project structure is not a feature. It is the only mechanism that takes learning all the way to application.

    The students in Chhattisgarh writing Python code are not a talking point. They are the proof. And there are 358,072 others like them — each one the output of a programme that chose to be measured rather than merely celebrated. At a moment when India is still working out what skill education means in practice, that foundation is more valuable than any announcement or pilot could be.

    “We welcome CBSE’s decision to mandate Kaushalbodh and Computational Thinking & AI across schools. For Ulipsu’s 800-plus partner schools, this transition has been seamless, because we began implementing the vision of NEP and India’s national skilling agenda long before it became policy. Our schools didn’t have to scramble to comply. They were already there.”

    — Nikhil Bhaskar, Co-Founder, Kidvento Education & Research Pvt. Ltd. (Ulipsu)

    Kidvento Education & Research Pvt. Ltd. is headquartered in Mysuru, Karnataka. The Ulipsu programme is active across 350+ schools in 12 states and 3 countries.

  • EuroKids Franchise Model Gains Traction Among First-Time Investors in Tier 2 and Tier 3 Cities

    EuroKids Franchise Model Gains Traction Among First-Time Investors in Tier 2 and Tier 3 Cities

    New Delhi [India], May 21: India’s franchise space is growing steadily, and Tier 2 and Tier 3 locations are becoming more important in that expansion. With 51% of India’s registered small and medium businesses now based in these cities, and India’s urban population expected to rise by 416 million by 2050, the business environment is opening up for formats that offer both stability and long-term potential.

    In this evolving market, EuroKids is gaining strong interest from first-time investors. Its education-led franchise model is gaining attention among those looking for a more structured opportunity supported by clear entry requirements, organised systems, and relevance in rising city centres.

    Why First-Time Investors are Looking More Closely

    For many first-time investors, the main concern is whether the business can be started and managed clearly and practically. EuroKids addresses that with a franchise model that does not require prior teaching or education experience. The model supports new investors from the beginning, with training, operations, and business systems included from the early stages. That makes it easier to understand for people entering organised education for the first time.

    EuroKids places the investment range at ₹15 lakh to ₹20 lakh, with a minimum space requirement of 1,500 sq ft. It is also positioned as a long-term partnership model, which helps set clear expectations from the beginning. For those exploring the best franchise business in India, this kind of clarity can play an important role in decision-making.

    Why EuroKids is Gaining Investor Attention

    The scale of the EuroKids network is one of the factors adding to investor interest. With 25+ years of experience, 2,000+ preschools, 550+ locations, 7,00,000+ children nurtured, and 1,70,000+ hours of curriculum research, the network reflects an established business model rather than a newly launched franchise concept. It also carries a 4.8 out of 5 rating drawn from 97,432 reviews across its preschool network. For a first-time investor, these numbers can add credibility to the opportunity.

    That credibility is further supported by the operational help built into the model. EuroKids extends support across infrastructure and ambience design, furniture and equipment, curriculum, teaching aids, business management tools, teacher training, marketing, operations, and lead management. Together, these details make the opportunity easier to understand and manage in day-to-day terms.

    Why Tier 2 and Tier 3 Cities Matter More Now

    EuroKids is aligning with the growing importance of non-metro cities. Its franchise model is focused towards Tier 2 and Tier 3 locations, where the brand is also seeing a stronger presence. As smaller cities grow into stronger investment hubs, investors are looking for businesses that combine local demand with organised execution. Early childhood education fits well into this shift, especially when the model comes with clear systems and operational support.

    This growing relevance is also linked to the wider importance of early childhood education in India. With increasing attention on quality preschool learning, trained educators, and structured early learning environments, organised preschool formats are becoming more meaningful in rising city centres. That wider focus also supports the need for organised preschool formats in growing cities.

    Why the Opportunity is Resonating

    A franchise opportunity becomes more appealing when it combines a business structure with long-term relevance. This is where EuroKids is beginning to stand out more clearly. For first-time investors in smaller and growing cities, the model brings together a known name, visible scale, clear entry requirements, and organised support in a sector that continues to matter to families. This combination is making the opportunity easier to notice among today’s franchise options.

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