The impact of artificial intelligence on the Indian educational system has been so great that most government schools across the country now offer AI as a subject of study. For graduates in India, many colleges have adopted AI/ML programs. In order to give children a career, Raipur is now preparing to offer classes in robotics, artificial intelligence, and machine learning.
A press release claims that PT. RD Tiwari Government English School is the tenth government school in India to establish a robotics lab as part of the “Jigyasa” project. 500 pupils from different classes can learn about the creation of models and electronic devices in this lab.
The ‘Jigyasa’ initiative also includes Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, and Gujarat in addition to Raipur. Students will be able to learn how to build robots, technical models, electronic devices, and more in the lab. Students in grades 4 and 5 will learn about models without electronic components, while those in grades 6 through 10 will receive training on how to build such electronic models. Additionally, they will learn computer programming in the robotics lab.
The pupils’ creative abilities can be improved by exposing them to the development of models, programming, and robots. The primary goal of this project, according to Anuj Kumar Dwivedi, principal of Pt. RD Tiwari Government English School, is to raise students’ interest in important topics like physics and mathematics. “The laboratory’s entire equipment was imported from Sweden,” he continued.
The principal added that a mentor had been chosen to instruct students in programming and robot construction. He thinks the lab will assist the students in obtaining a better profession in the future. The laboratory’s mentor, Saurabh Verma, stated that “primary level children would study designing through an interactive session. Students will be taught specifically about load balance and scientific principles. He added that the students would receive training in the robotics lab to create models that can address issues affecting regular people, such as the creation of traffic signals and the software that makes them run.