The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) has launched a structured curriculum on Computational Thinking (CT) and Artificial Intelligence (AI) for students from Classes 3 to 8, aiming to equip young learners with skills for the digital age.
According to media reports, the program was formally unveiled by Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan at Vigyan Bhawan in New Delhi on Wednesday.
Designed for age-appropriate integration, the curriculum recommends 50 hours annually for Classes 3 to 5 and 100 hours for Classes 6 to 8, allowing a phased introduction of CT and AI concepts into mainstream school education.
The initiative is part of India’s broader push to enhance AI literacy and digital citizenship among schoolchildren, aligning with global trends in technology-driven education.
Foundational Computational Thinking for Early Learners
For students in Classes 3 to 5, the curriculum introduces computational thinking through existing subjects, such as environmental studies via The World Around Us (TWAU) textbook, and mathematics.
Young learners will engage with puzzles, games, and exercises designed to develop logical thinking, pattern recognition, sequencing, and problem-solving skills—all core competencies in early AI education.
Each class will have a resource book aligned with textbooks, enabling teachers to integrate CT concepts seamlessly into regular lessons. Assessments will be linked to core subjects, ensuring that computational thinking complements rather than disrupts the existing academic framework.
This approach mirrors international best practices, where CT is embedded in early schooling to build foundational analytical skills before introducing more complex AI concepts.
Advanced CT and Introductory AI for Upper-Primary Students
Students in Classes 6 to 8 will progress to advanced computational thinking and AI fundamentals, supported by interdisciplinary, project-based learning. Of the 100 hours allocated annually, 40 hours are devoted to advanced CT, 20 hours to AI concepts, and the remaining 40 hours to project work.
The curriculum focuses on real-world problem solving, exposing students to AI tools and applications in areas like healthcare, finance, and sustainability. It also introduces digital citizenship topics, including digital footprints, algorithmic bias, privacy, and fairness, ensuring students understand both the potential and ethical implications of technology.
Interdisciplinary projects will integrate mathematics, science, social studies, and English, encouraging students to design creative, data-driven solutions. Assessments will include project presentations, assignments, reflective journals, and hands-on tasks, supported by detailed rubrics, reflecting a global emphasis on competency-based evaluation in AI education.
Expert-Designed Curriculum for Nationwide Implementation
The curriculum was developed by a 10-member expert committee led by Dr Karthik Raman of IIT Madras, including experts from Azim Premji University, Bengaluru, and Dhirubhai Ambani University, Gandhinagar.
CBSE chairman Rahul Singh reportedly said, “The committee held nine meetings over three months and consulted NCERT officials, technology experts, principals, and computer teachers of CBSE-affiliated schools.”
The program will be implemented across 32,900 CBSE-affiliated schools starting from the 2026–27 academic session. Pradhan described it as a “transformative step” for future-ready learning, reinforced by structured modules, teacher handbooks, and assessment frameworks.
“With India’s leadership in technology-driven computing gaining global recognition, the curriculum would empower students to meaningfully engage with and shape the digital future,” he added.
School education secretary Sanjay Kumar said that the initiative places India alongside countries like China, South Korea, Finland, Estonia, and Singapore, which have already integrated AI into school education. He also confirmed that efforts will be made to translate the curriculum into regional languages, ensuring inclusive adoption across all states and Union Territories, stated reports.
