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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsLaunch of Ambitious AI Training Under IndiaAI Mission's FutureSkills Pillar
India's higher education landscape is undergoing a transformative shift with the IndiaAI Mission's FutureSkills initiative, recently highlighted by Principal Scientific Adviser Prof. Ajay Sood. This program targets training 500 PhD scholars, 5,000 postgraduate (PG) students, and 8,000 undergraduate (UG) students in artificial intelligence (AI) through collaborations with universities and centres of excellence. As part of a broader ₹10,400 crore investment, it aligns national priorities with academic curricula, fostering a skilled workforce ready for AI-driven innovation.
The initiative builds on the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, which introduces research components in four-year UG programs and multiple exit options, ensuring students gain hands-on AI experience early in their academic journey. Universities like the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) and National Institutes of Technology (NITs) are at the forefront, integrating AI projects that address real-world challenges in sectors such as healthcare, agriculture, and manufacturing.
Background and Objectives of the IndiaAI Mission
The IndiaAI Mission, approved by the Cabinet in March 2024, spans five years with a budget of ₹10,371.92 crore. It comprises seven pillars designed to create a sovereign, inclusive AI ecosystem: IndiaAI Compute Capacity, Innovation Centre, Datasets Platform (AIKosh), Application Development, FutureSkills, Startup Financing, and Safe & Trusted AI. The FutureSkills pillar specifically aims to democratize AI education across UG, PG, and PhD levels, establishing Data and AI Labs even in Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities to bridge urban-rural divides in higher education.
In the context of India's 15 lakh annual engineering graduates—43% of whom are women in STEM—this training addresses skill gaps, preparing students for global AI leadership. By partnering with top engineering colleges, the mission ensures theoretical knowledge translates into practical applications, boosting research output and employability in academia and industry alike.
Breakdown of Fellowship Targets and Expansion Plans
The fellowships have expanded to empower 13,500 scholars: 8,000 UG students, 5,000 PG learners, and 500 PhD researchers. Initial disbursements supported 130 BTech UG and 40 MTech PG students, with ongoing reviews for broader inclusion. Looking ahead, AI Mission 2.0 plans to extend AI training—complete with GPUs, datasets, and tools—to 500 universities, mirroring semiconductor skilling models and launching in 5-6 months.
- UG Focus: Project-based learning for freshmen to seniors, funding up to ₹1,00,000 per project.
- PG Emphasis: Advanced AI/ML applications in 1st-3rd semesters, minimum 75-80% academic thresholds.
- PhD Support: Full-time researchers tackling foundational AI challenges like bias mitigation and interpretability.
This structured approach not only scales talent but also positions Indian universities as hubs for AI excellence.
Eligibility Criteria and Application Process
Eligibility varies by level: UG students need enrollment in participating colleges with innovative AI project proposals; PG candidates require confirmed admission (1st-3rd semester) and strong academics (80% UG, 75% PG); PhD applicants must be full-time with no concurrent scholarships. Nominations come via college portals, emphasizing projects in AI ethics, computer vision, language models, and more.
Step-by-step process:
- Register on IndiaAI Portal.
- Submit profile, transcripts, and project details.
- College nomination and peer review.
- Selection based on innovation and impact potential.
Participating Universities and Colleges
Over two dozen premier institutions participate, including IIT Madras, IIT Kanpur, IIT Kharagpur, IIT Hyderabad, NIT Calicut, NIT Karnataka, Amity University, Chandigarh University, and Aligarh Muslim University. These hubs nominate top talent, providing mentorship and infrastructure. Expansion to 500 universities will include more Tier-2/3 colleges, democratizing access and fostering collaborations like PAIR under Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF).
For aspiring AI researchers, explore opportunities at these institutions via higher education jobs platforms to align careers with national missions.
Stipends, Benefits, and Real-World Projects
Fellows receive project funding (₹1,00,000+ for UG/PG), mentorship from industry experts, access to GPU clusters, and certification. PhD stipends support full-time research, often integrated with ANRF grants like PM Early Career Research Grant. Highlighted projects include 'Smart Firefighting Using Computer Vision' and 'Monocular 3D Pedestrian Detection,' demonstrating tangible societal impact.
Benefits extend to enhanced resumes, publications, and job prospects in AI academia—vital for crafting a winning academic CV.
Success Stories and Early Outcomes
First-round fellows from IITs and NITs have advanced biometric security and driver assistance systems, paving ways for startups and patents. As of 2026, over 800 young researchers benefit from linked ANRF schemes, with universities reporting surged AI enrollments and interdisciplinary research. Institutions like IIT Roorkee integrate these into NEP-aligned curricula, boosting female STEM participation.
Implications for Indian Higher Education
This initiative aligns universities with missions like National Quantum and Green Hydrogen, via centres of excellence and Manthan platform (₹9,000 crore projects). Tier-2/3 colleges gain via UTTHAN and PM-USHA funding, reducing urban biases. NEP's research-infused UG degrees prepare graduates for faculty positions and industry R&D.
Cultural context: India's multilingual diversity drives AI in Indic languages, enhancing local relevance.
Challenges, Solutions, and Stakeholder Perspectives
Challenges include compute access and faculty shortages; solutions via 10,000+ GPUs and VAIBHAV Fellowships for diaspora collaboration. Ajay Sood emphasizes mission-mode roadmaps, while educators hail curriculum reforms. Students seek more inclusive criteria beyond 80% cutoffs.
- Risks: Over-reliance on top IITs—mitigated by 500-uni expansion.
- Benefits: 10 lakh youth skilling, global partnerships.
Future Outlook and Actionable Insights
With India AI Impact Summit 2026 showcasing outcomes, expect AI-native campuses by 2030. Students: Propose bold projects; faculty: Leverage ANRF grants; institutions: Nominate early. Track progress via official portal. For career growth, visit Rate My Professor, Higher Ed Jobs, and Career Advice sections. This positions AcademicJobs.com as your gateway to AI academia opportunities.

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