Technology

Trickle Effect: The Fruits Of India’s Lively AI Innovation Ecosystem Help To Ignite School-Level Learning

Anand Parthasarathy

Jun 30, 2023, 06:11 PM | Updated 06:11 PM IST


The free Embibe Lens app, uses a smartphone camera to provide students with 3-D images of school learning topics in science and maths.
The free Embibe Lens app, uses a smartphone camera to provide students with 3-D images of school learning topics in science and maths.
  • Bengaluru-based Embibe's innovative app for phones that enhances text of school subjects with vivid 3-D images and videos, announced.
  • AISI, an online self directed and tutor-led learning platform provides AI and coding technology to students, schools and women at home.
  • India’s AI-driven innovators and corporations with their educational outreaches are helping to enlighten a new generation of young Indians. 
  • Earlier this week, the Bengaluru-based Artificial Intelligence-powered  learning platform, Embibe, announced the free availability of an innovative app for phones, which enhances the text of school subjects like Physics, Chemistry, Biology and Mathematics with vivid 3-D images and videos.

    Called Embibe Lens, it can be downloaded from Google Play Store and App Store. Using a smartphone, a student can scan any page or paragraph, or select a concept — and see relevant high-definition 3-dimensional images come alive.

    The company’s website lists NCERT textbooks and CBSE subjects for class 6 to 12, a few state board examinations, as well as a long list of competitive examinations, from which students can select their specific interest.

    The app enables students to access a vast array of educational resources anytime, anywhere, at no cost. It is presently available in English and Hindi.

    It is not just for students: Says Founder-CEO Adithi Avasthi: “Embibe Lens also empowers teachers by significantly reducing their effort and time. Creating diagrams from scratch is a daunting as well as time-consuming task. With our Lens, teachers can explain concepts more vividly to students, enabling them to focus on their core strength — delivering quality education."

    Embibe’s offering is the latest example of the fruits of India’s lively AI innovators, reaching teachers, parents and students at little or no cost.

    AI School Of India: K-12 Content

    The AI School of India's tools seek to engage both students and parents. (Compiled from ASISI resources)
    The AI School of India's tools seek to engage both students and parents. (Compiled from ASISI resources)

    Chennai is home to the AI School of India (AISI), an online self directed and tutor-led learning platform providing AI and coding technology to students, schools and women at home.  

    The content for Kindergarten to class 12 (K-12) is created by educators and engineers trained at IT majors like Intel and IBM, Oxford University and Graz University of Technology in Austria. The school is supported by a leading global player, Robotix.

    Says an AISI blog which explains the rationale driving its efforts: “We are moving into the world of Augmented Reality, Virtual Reality, Artificial Intelligence, and Autonomous Vehicles. Keeping in mind these technological advancements, we need to think about various class technologies for learning and teaching…. Educational institutions in India need to work on digital transformation in education. Schools should provide a space for students to learn about advanced technologies and adapt themselves to the new world.”

    Virtual Reality Labs For Chennai Government Schools

    Some AI startups, invest in educational outreaches as part of their corporate social responsibility: A year ago, Meynikara, a Virtual Reality (VR) and Augmented Reality (AR) player, based in Chennai, launched ‘Meta Kalvi’, Tamil Nadu’s first VR Lab for excellence in education, at three government schools and two corporation schools in the Chepauk-Thiruvallikeni area of the city. 

    It harnesses VR for maths and science subjects for class 6-8 in English and Tamil. The initiative is being spread to other schools in the state.

    Skilling With Extended Reality

    AjnaLens harnesses Extended Reality for training and skilling.
    AjnaLens harnesses Extended Reality for training and skilling.

    Earlier this month, AjnaLens, a leading Mumbai-based Extended Reality (XR) Hardware manufacturing company joined hands with MetaStudios, a  metaverse and gaming-focused studio, to build immersive experiences and training programmes to upskill both the young and adults. 

    Their flagship product is AjnaXR Glasses, while their learning platform, AjnaVidya, allows users to interact seamlessly with each other and learn new skills inside the virtual space.

    Robotics Expo During Thrissur Pooram

    Kerala-based Inker Robotics drew record crowds of families at its expo — HelloBotz 23 — on the sidelines of this year's Thrissur Pooram festival.
    Kerala-based Inker Robotics drew record crowds of families at its expo — HelloBotz 23 — on the sidelines of this year's Thrissur Pooram festival.

    On the sidelines of the Thrissur Pooram in Kerala during May this year, local robotics company INKER Roboticsdecided to hold an expo, ‘HelloBotz ‘23’ to introduce lay people, especially children, to robots.

    The exhibits proved such a huge family attraction that the show had to be extended well beyond the Pooram. In the process young and old, totaling over a lakh, got a rare chance to say hello to a full slate of humanoid robots produced by the company.

    It was a rare coming together of tradition and technology, of caparisoned elephants and AI-fueled robotics.

    In Step With UNESCO Recommendations

    These efforts of Indian companies to evangelise and harness AI for basic school education, seem to be in harmony with the UNESCO report, “2022 State of the Education Report (SOER) for India: Artificial Intelligence in Education – Here, There and Everywhere”, which suggests that implementation of AI in education systems can revolutionise the teaching-learning process. (More details in this Swarajya report).

    As AjnaLens explains in an instructive blog published on 9 June, Extended Reality, or XR, is an umbrella of all existing and upcoming immersive technologies.

    It is a superset of Augmented Reality (AR), Virtual Reality (VR), and Mixed Reality (MR) technologies. All these extend the reality we experience today by blending the virtual and "real" worlds or creating a fully immersive experience. Beyond marketing and entertainment, XR finds its most meaningful applications in education.

    In India the XR industry is said by the blog to be growing phenomenally at over 38 per cent and is expected to reach a market size US $14.07 billion by 2027.

    Within this, the education and training sector is seeing the fastest growth, a trend seen to persist till 2030.

    India’s AI-driven innovators and corporations with their educational outreaches are helping to enlighten a new generation of young Indians with the very same cutting-edge tools that they will inevitably harness and exploit in later life. It’s never too early to start!

    Anand Parthasarathy is managing director at Online India Tech Pvt Ltd and a veteran IT journalist who has written about the Indian technology landscape for more than 15 years for The Hindu.


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