NEW DELHI: The Central government is working on a comprehensive revamp of the Artificial Intelligence (AI) curriculum in collaboration with the industry to better prepare students for emerging technological trends.
Union Minister for Electronics and Information Technology Ashwini Vaishnaw discussed the roadmap for curriculum reforms at a high-level meeting with the AI Curriculum Taskforce in New Delhi.
The Taskforce conducted a baseline study of existing Bachelor of Technology (B.Tech) Computer Science and allied courses across Indian educational institutions in partnership with industry experts and the National Association of Software and Service Companies (NASSCOM).
While the study noted an increase in AI-related content in Indian curricula, it identified major gaps in pedagogy, infrastructure and practical exposure, particularly in areas such as Generative AI, Machine Learning Operations (MLOps) and foundational model development.
The proposed reforms focus on application-oriented learning, moving away from traditional lecture-based teaching towards industry use cases from the first semester itself. The roadmap also suggests integrating AI courses into the formal academic credit system with a structured semester-wise rollout.
Focus areas
Application-Oriented Pedagogy: Shift from lecture-based teaching to a learning anchored in real industry use cases from the first semester.
Credit-Linked Curriculum Integration: AI courses embedded within the formal academic credit system with a structured semester-wise rollout.
Enhanced Practical Exposure: A shift from the current 25–30 per cent practical exposure to 40–75 per cent, depending on the nature of the degree and the chosen specialisation.
Industry-Integrated Pedagogy: Industry exposure distributed across the programme through capstone projects, end-to-end AI solution engineering, and use of low-code and no-code tools.
Responsible AI as a Continuous Thread: Responsible AI and AI Governance integrated across all semesters instead of standalone modules.
Multiple Entry-Exit Options: A flexible pathway providing a Certificate after Year 1, a Diploma after Year 2, and an Advanced Diploma after Year 3.
Faculty development
Recognising that curriculum reform must be matched by faculty readiness, the consultation placed faculty capacity building at the centre of the proposed roadmap.
The recommendations include structured train-the-trainer programmes, curated course content, standardised assessment frameworks, and modernised labs in-sync with current industry tools and platforms.
Focused intervention was also recommended for engaging seasoned industry professionals as adjunct faculty. This draws on the proven model of premier business schools, to bring deep practitioner expertise into the classroom.
The participants proposed the creation of a national-level shared AI infrastructure. The triple helix model would be jointly supported by industry, the Government and academic institutions.
This would ensure equitable access to Graphics Processing Unit (GPU) compute, edge devices, software stacks and subscription-based platforms across colleges and universities.
Future roadmap
- The consultation concluded with consensus on four immediate next steps:
- Estimation of Requirements for compute, infrastructure, faculty and learner volumes at a national scale.
- Engagement with the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) for formal adoption of the revamped curriculum in semesters five through eight of ongoing batches, alongside full integration for incoming batches.
- Faculty Development Roadmap, including industry-led training, experience sharing and a structured pathway for corporate practitioners to serve as educators.
- Parallel Track for Non-STEM Disciplines, to be taken up as a separate workstream covering AI awareness, foundational AI literacy and the applied use of AI in non-technical roles.