India’s classrooms just got a serious tech upgrade, and this NEP 2020 AI education push is genuinely a good news story.
What happened
Between 2021 and 2026, India rolled out 14 major initiatives under the broader NEP 2020 AI education framework. These range from AI powered assessments and robotics labs to smart classrooms, and even an AI teacher on WhatsApp. In addition, states, the central government, ed tech companies, and global partners like Google and UNICEF all pitched in, which shows just how coordinated this effort has become.
The numbers behind the noise
The scale here is hard to ignore. For instance, Gujarat’s tech ecosystem now covers over 1.15 crore students across 54,000 schools. Meanwhile, Rajasthan has run AI powered assessments on more than 45 lakh students, and its “Padhai With AI” programme reportedly pushed pass rates up to 96.4%. Uttar Pradesh, similarly, expanded the PM SHRI scheme to 1,713 schools, the highest of any state. Chhattisgarh, on the other hand, brought robotics and AI into 800 government schools, reaching 40,000 students.
Why this is worth paying attention to
Usually, when we talk about AI in education, the conversation centers on risk: cheating, screen time, kids losing basic skills. This NEP 2020 AI education rollout tells a different story. Government schools, not just elite private ones, are getting robotics kits, AI labs, and trained teachers. What’s more, rural and remote regions are part of the plan too, like Northeast India’s first AI powered WhatsApp teacher through NagaEd, or Karnataka’s rural AI STEM labs through Cyient Foundation. As a result, if this scales the way it’s designed to, it could meaningfully narrow the gap between well resourced schools and everyone else.
The bigger picture
This isn’t just one flashy pilot program. Rather, it’s a coordinated, multi year effort involving central and state governments, NCERT, private foundations, and international bodies, all building toward the same goal under NEP 2020. NCERT, for example, is building a dedicated AI curriculum for Classes 11 and 12, which signals this isn’t just infrastructure. It’s becoming part of what students formally learn.
Bottom line
In short, India is quietly running one of the largest AI in education experiments in the world under the NEP 2020 AI education vision, and government schools are right at the center of it, not an afterthought.
Original reporting: Organiser






