Microsoft to Skill 2 Million Indian Teachers in AI by 2030, Targets 200K Schools

Microsoft has launched the Elevate for Educators initiative in India, aiming to skill two million teachers and reach 200,000 educational institutions by 2030. The program is designed to embed AI literacy and computational thinking into everyday teaching, supporting India's ambition to become an AI-first nation. It will be delivered in partnership with major national educational bodies like CBSE and NCERT, impacting millions of students. The announcement underscores a system-level approach to turn the National Education Policy's AI intent into widespread classroom practice.

Key Points: Microsoft Launches AI Skilling for 2M Indian Teachers by 2030

  • Skill 2M teachers & 200K institutions by 2030
  • Embed AI into curriculum from Grade 3
  • Part of goal to equip 20M Indians with AI skills
  • Partnership with CBSE, NCERT, and state bodies
3 min read

Microsoft launches AI skilling programme for 2 million Indian teachers, 200,000 institutions by 2030

Microsoft Elevate for Educators aims to skill 2 million teachers and reach 200,000 institutions in India by 2030, embedding AI literacy into the national curriculum.

"We are investing in teachers as the architects of India's AI first future - Puneet Chandok"

New Delhi, February 21

Microsoft has announced the launch of Microsoft Elevate for Educators in India, an initiative designed to skill two million teachers and reach 200,000 schools and educational institutions by 2030, as part of Microsoft's broader commitment to equip 20 million people in India with AI skills.

India is the first country in Asia to launch the program.

As global conversations around AI increasingly focus on productivity and growth, the next chapter of AI adoption will be written in classrooms--where skills are built, judgment is shaped, and technology is learned responsibly.

This shift is especially consequential in India, home to over 200 million students and nearly 10 million educators, making it the world's largest classroom.

Speaking on this announcement, Brad Smith, Vice Chair and President, Microsoft, said, "As AI becomes part of everyday learning, we want to ensure it strengthens education, preserves human judgment, and earns the trust of educators and learners. By taking AI at this scale across India, we want it to open new opportunities and deliver meaningful outcomes for teachers and students."

The announcement took place at CM Shri School, Pandara Road, New Delhi, with the program set to be scaled across all 75 CM Shri schools in the Capital.

Microsoft Elevate for Educators is designed to embed AI literacy, computational thinking, and responsible technology use into everyday teaching and learning--supporting India's ambition to become an AI first nation while ensuring that AI adoption remains trusted, inclusive, and human centered.

"Skilling is the cornerstone of India's AI transformation. As intelligence becomes widely available, the real differentiator will be how confidently and responsibly people can use it--and that starts with educators. With Microsoft Elevate for Educators, we are investing in teachers as the architects of India's AI first future, enabling AI to reach people at population scale by embedding AI literacy and computational thinking into everyday learning," said Puneet Chandok, President, Microsoft India and South Asia.

The program will be delivered in partnership with Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE), National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT), All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), National Council for Vocational Education and Training (NCVET), the Directorate General of Training (DGT), and state education and skilling departments--expanding equitable AI opportunities for eight million students across school, vocational, and higher education systems.

Beginning this academic year, AI and Computational Thinking will be embedded into school curriculum from Grade 3 onwards under the country's National Education Policy (NEP) 2020. Elevate for Educators takes a system level approach to support this transition, working in long-term partnership with national and state institutions to turn policy intent into classroom practice at scale. level approach to support this transition, working in long-term partnership with national and state institutions to turn policy intent into classroom practice at scale.-level approach to support this transition, working in long-term partnership with national and state institutions to turn policy intent into classroom practice at scale.

Microsoft Elevate for Educators is part of a decade-long partnership with India's education ecosystem--one that recognizes educators as stewards of trust, judgment, and opportunity. As AI reshapes how knowledge is created and shared, investing in teachers remains the most durable path to ensuring that India's AI first future is also human first.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Great move by Microsoft. India becoming an 'AI first nation' starts with education. My only concern is the implementation gap. We have great policies, but execution in remote schools is a challenge. Hope they have a solid plan for tier 2/3 cities and villages, not just Delhi schools.
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Aditya G
Finally! Integrating AI from Grade 3 is the right way forward. Our kids need to be future-ready. Partnering with CBSE and NCERT gives it the necessary credibility. Jai Hind!
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Sarah B
Investing in teachers is indeed the most durable path. The scale here is mind-boggling - 200 million students! If executed well, this could be a global case study for equitable AI education. The focus on 'responsible use' is crucial.
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Karthik V
Good step, but what about the digital divide? Many schools still lack basic computers and internet. AI skilling is great, but we need infrastructure first. Hope the program addresses this hardware gap alongside software training.
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Nisha Z
As a parent, I'm excited. My daughter is in Grade 5 and already curious about technology. Embedding computational thinking early will help her develop problem-solving skills, not just rote learning. Thumbs up to Microsoft and the government for this collaboration! 👍

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