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New Delhi: OpenAI is making one of its biggest bets on India’s education sector yet. The company announced an India-first Learning Accelerator programme that will give away 500,000 free ChatGPT licences to students and teachers, backed by research funding at IIT-Madras. The rollout is being carried out in collaboration with the Ministry of Education and the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE).
This comes at a time when India is OpenAI’s largest student user base globally on ChatGPT. Millions of learners across the country already turn to the tool for homework help, exam prep, and projects. Now, the company says it wants to ensure AI strengthens education rather than just offering shortcuts. The announcement was first reported at the India Education Summit and further detailed in OpenAI’s blog.
The OpenAI Learning Accelerator is structured around three pillars: research, access, and training.
OpenAI said the initiative has been tailored for Indian needs. ChatGPT is being optimised for basic smartphones and supports 11 Indian languages. The company emphasised this move would help bridge the digital divide in classrooms that may not have access to expensive devices or high-speed internet.
AICTE chairman Prof. T.G. Sitharam highlighted that integrating AI tools like ChatGPT into technical institutes would boost hands-on training and employability. IIT-Madras director Dr. Kamakoti Veezhinathan said the collaboration would help push the boundaries of pedagogy and innovation.
The announcement adds to OpenAI’s growing footprint in India:
Leah Belsky, OpenAI’s vice president of education, called this one of the company’s most significant education investments in India, saying it aligns with their mission to ensure AI benefits humanity.
India has over 250 million school-going students and one of the fastest-growing higher education ecosystems. By distributing free licences and investing in research, OpenAI is positioning itself as a key player in shaping how AI will be embedded in classrooms. The partnership with IIT-Madras ensures local research expertise feeds into global AI design.
But there are also questions. How will educators adapt to AI in everyday teaching? Will students over-rely on ChatGPT instead of building problem-solving skills? The research outcomes from IIT-Madras will be crucial in answering these.