Key Points

Google has teamed up with IIMC to launch an AI Skills Academy for Indian newsrooms. The 10-week hybrid programme will train journalists in tools like Gemini and NotebookLM. The initiative aims to enhance efficiency and storytelling in media. It will also extend training to students across six IIMC campuses.

Key Points: Google Launches AI Skills Academy for Indian Newsrooms with IIMC

  • Google and IIMC launch 10-week AI training for journalists
  • Programme includes tools like Gemini and NotebookLM
  • Hybrid sessions focus on efficiency and storytelling
  • Initiative spans six IIMC campuses nationwide
2 min read

Google introduces AI Skill Academy in India

Google partners with IIMC to train Indian journalists and educators in AI tools like Gemini and NotebookLM for newsroom efficiency.

"We’re excited to announce the Google News Initiative AI Skills Academy to empower newsrooms with AI tools. – Google"

New Delhi, July 28

Tech giant Google on Monday said that it has launched the Google News Initiative (GNI) AI Skills Academy, in collaboration with the Indian Institute of Mass Communication (IIMC) here.

According to the company, the new initiative is aimed at equipping Indian newsrooms with the knowledge and tools they need to thrive in an AI-powered future.

"Continuing our commitment to collaborate with news organisations across India and bring them Google’s best-in-class technology, we're excited to announce the launch of the Google News Initiative AI Skills Academy in collaboration with the Indian Institute of Mass Communication (IIMC), Department of New Media," the tech giant said in a statement.

This will be a 10-week, hybrid training series, which is designed to equip newsrooms and media educators with foundational AI understanding and practical skills.

Participants will learn to leverage Google’s AI tools like NotebookLM, Gemini, AI Studio and Pinpoint to streamline workflows, boost efficiency, and free up valuable time for deeper and more creative research and in-depth, diverse storytelling.

Launched by Google in an academic partnership with IIMC and with training support from How India Lives, this hybrid programme will empower participants to apply AI tools across a range of relevant use-cases.

The programme will offer weekly deep dives, practical exercises, dedicated mentoring, and problem-solving sessions. This programme has been curated to provide participants with support to leverage AI to perform newsroom tasks more efficiently.

"We're also proud to support IIMC in training media educators and students across its campuses in six cities in India," Google stated.

This collaboration is a major step towards empowering media professionals and media educators with essential AI skills.

"As AI transforms journalism, this initiative will help them stay ahead. We intend to promote responsible innovation and enhance creativity in storytelling. IIMC is happy to be part of this initiative that will also help train students across our six campuses”, said Nimish Rustagi, Registrar, Indian Institute of Mass Communication.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good initiative but I hope they also teach ethical use of AI. We've seen how AI can be misused to create deepfakes. Journalists should be trained to verify AI-generated content properly.
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Aditya G
As a journalism student, I'm thrilled! When will this be available for other colleges? IIMC students are lucky to get first access. Google should expand to tier 2 cities too.
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Nisha Z
Hope they include regional language journalists too. Most Indian news consumers prefer vernacular content. AI tools should work well with Hindi, Tamil, Bengali etc. not just English.
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Karthik V
While this is good, I'm concerned about job losses in media. Will AI replace junior reporters? The program should focus on AI as assistant, not replacement. Human judgment is still crucial in journalism.
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Sarah B
Interesting collaboration! I hope they share some learnings publicly. As a digital marketer, I'd love to understand how AI can help with content verification - a big challenge in India's media landscape.

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