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Betteru Education Corp. $BTRU.ca – Sequoia India Led $40 Mn Series C Funding Round In #Edtech Company Eruditus $ARCL $CPLA $BPI $FC.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 8:52 AM on Friday, January 11th, 2019
SPONSOR:  Betteru Education Corp. Connecting global leading educators to the mass population of India. BetterU Education has ability to reach 100 MILLION potential learners each week. Click here for more information.
BTRU: TSX-V

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Sequoia India Led $40 Mn Series C Funding Round In Edtech Company Eruditus

  • Existing investor Bertelsmann India Investments also participated in the round
  • The funding will be used to increase its course offerings in technical subjects
  • It also plans to expand its multilingual offerings

Edtech company the Eruditus group which runs Eruditus Executive Education and its online division Emeritus has raised $40Mn (INR 281 Cr) in a Series C funding round which was led by Sequoia India. The round also saw participation from existing investor Bertelsmann India Investments.

The company will use this funding to increase its course offerings in technical subjects such as data science, machine learning, blockchain and cybersecurity. It also plans to expand its language offerings to include Portuguese and Mandarin, in addition to English and Spanish.

“We will use the proceeds of this latest fundraise to create a more immersive and adaptive learning platform, to expand our multilingual capabilities, and to ensure that our omnichannel offerings are readily available to our students on-the-go,” said Ashwin Damera, cofounder of Eruditus and director at Emeritus.

Eruditus: Targeting A 10X Hike In Student Enrollment

Eruditus, founded in 2010 by Chaitanya Kalipatnapu and Ashwin Damera, provides executive education programmes in association with global business schools such as MIT, Columbia, Harvard Business School, INSEAD, Tuck at Dartmouth, Wharton, UC Berkeley and London Business School.

These programs are held for six to eight months and can be available via on campus, off campus and online modes.

Related Article: Edtech Startup Eruditus Secures $8.16 Mn Series B From Bertelsmann India Investments

The company is looking to enroll 30K students from more than 80 countries in the current financial year. It also aims to increase its enrollment by more than 10 times within the next five years across certificate courses and online degrees.

Eruditus had earlier raised $8.16 Mn (INR 57.4 Cr) in a Series B funding round led by Bertelsmann India Investments in 2017. Earlier in July, it had raised $2.2 Mn (INR 16 Cr) in a debt financing round from Innoven Capital.

Edtech Funding In India

The edtech sector has been recently gaining popularity among the investors. In 2017, edtech witnessed a 30% hike in terms of investments with international funding touching a new record of $9.52 Bn (INR 67,010 Cr).

Last month, Hyderabad-based edtech startup Toppr has raised funding of $35 Mn (INR 246.13 Cr) from Kaizen Private Equity and existing investors SAIF Partners, Helion Ventures, Kaizen PE and Eight Roads Ventures.

Edtech unicorn BYJU’S raised $540 Mn (INR 3,800 Cr) in Series F funding from Canada Pension board’s investment arm CPPIB Investment Board Private Holdings, Naspers Ventures BV and General Atlantic Singapore TL Pvt Ltd, boosting its valuation to $4 Bn (INR 28,155 Cr).

According to a report by the India Didactics Association, the online education industry in India is projected to grow almost eight times to hit $1.96 Bn (INR 13,795 Cr) by 2021. It also added that the number of paid users in the segment is expected to grow six-fold to reach 9.6 Bn by 2021.

A report by Google-KPMG said that reskilling and online certification courses accounted for about 38% of the total online education market as of 2017.

Source: https://inc42.com/buzz/sequoia-india-led-40-mn-series-c-funding-round-in-edtech-company-eruditus/

Betteru Education Corp. $BTRU.ca – 3 Reasons Why #India Will Be A Leader in the #EdTech Industry in the 21st Century $ARCL $CPLA $BPI $FC.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 3:04 PM on Friday, January 4th, 2019
SPONSOR:  Betteru Education Corp. Connecting global leading educators to the mass population of India. BetterU Education has ability to reach 100 MILLION potential learners each week. Click here for more information.
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3 Reasons Why India Will Be A Leader in the EdTech Industry in the 21st Century

  • According to a joint report by KPMG and Google, the online education industry is expected to grow at a healthy rate of 8 times to become a $1.96B industry by 2021
  • Five categories of education in India have been cited as the ones with great potential for considerable online adoption

By Matthew Lynch

According to a joint report by KPMG and Google, the online education industry is expected to grow at a healthy rate of 8 times to become a $1.96B industry by 2021. Five categories of education in India have been cited as the ones with great potential for considerable online adoption. These include primary and secondary supplemental education, test preparation, reskilling and online certification, higher education, and language and casual learning.

The important question here is – what’s driving the considerable growth of education technology in India? Well, the following are the 3 key reasons why India will be a leader in EdTech in the 21st century:

  1. E-learning Boost via the Digital India Initiative

With an aim to transform the country into a digitally empowered society, the Indian government launched The Digital India Initiative. This was a huge move that had a substantial impact on the country’s technology industry, bringing a wave of revolution in every aspect. The education sector is one of the sectors that are benefiting from this initiative.

To boost e-education, all schools and universities are set to be connected with broadband and free Wi-Fi.  Also to be put in place is a Digital Literacy Program, as well as the development of pilot Massive Online Open Courses. Once the goals of the Digital India Initiative are realized, India will certainly be ahead in the EdTech game.

  1. Vast User Base of Mobile Device Use

There are more than 850 million mobile phone subscribers in India. According to a report by the Internet and Mobile Association of India (IAMAI), mobile internet is largely used by youngsters. With an increase rate of over 10M users a month, there’s no doubt that mobile devices are the classrooms of tomorrow. Current user base for e-learning predominantly consists of school students and working professionals.

Not only are Indians realizing the potential for mobile learning, but major technology and publishing companies are also increasingly becoming aware of the potential of the education services delivered through mobile services. So, it’s only a matter of time and there will be a gold rush into the Indian mobile education market that will put the country at the top as far as EdTech is concerned.

  1. Low Cost Alternative to Offline Learning

Even though the average tuition for online courses varies from one program to another, it’s clear like night and day that online courses are much cheaper compared to the ones offered in classroom settings. Online skill enhancement courses are estimated to be about 53% cheaper compared to offline alternatives. Larger student base and lower infrastructure cost help leverage on the economies of scale, thus the reduced costs via the online channel.

It’s apparent that the EdTech industry in India is one of the blooming sectors with a lot to offer to stakeholders. There’s no doubt that edtech will undergo an evolution and set the stage for the momentous growth that will be witnessed in the forthcoming years not just in India, but all around the world.

Source: https://www.thetechedvocate.org/3-reasons-why-india-will-be-a-leader-of-the-edtech-industry-in-the-21st-century/

Betteru Education Corp. $BTRU.ca – #Google $GOOG and #KPMG estimates #India’s online education #edtech industry to grow eight-fold to reach $1.96 billion by 2021

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 2:34 PM on Thursday, January 3rd, 2019
SPONSOR:  Betteru Education Corp. Connecting global leading educators to the mass population of India. BetterU Education has ability to reach 100 MILLION potential learners each week. Click here for more information.
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Google and KPMG estimates India’s online education industry to grow eight-fold to reach $1.96 billion by 2021

Growing EdTech Market in India: Key Catalyst

  • India is witnessing demographic dividends, implying more and more people, students and professionals alike are undertaking smart courses in order to improve knowledge base to gain a competitive edge in their careers.
  • This phenomenon has convinced analysts of the immense growth prospects of the burgeoning EdTech industry in India.
  • Reducing internet costs and increasing internet penetration in the country are other notable factors favoring the growth prospects of EdTech industry.
  • In fact, a research report from Google and KPMG estimates India’s online education industry to grow eight-fold to reach $1.96 billion by 2021. Further, the study projects paid users in EdTech to grow six times from 1.6 million in 2016 to 9.6 million in 2021.

By Zacks Equity Research, Zacks.com

Microsoft MSFT has introduced Surface Go tablet in India exclusively through Bengaluru, India-based e-commerce company, Flipkart. Recently, the company commenced shipping of the device, with prices ranging from INR 38,599 to INR 50,999.

The different variants of the new tablet series come with storage capacity of 64 GB and 128 GB, with 4 GB and 8 GB RAM, respectively.

Notably, Surface Go was introduced by Microsoft in a bid to explore the low-priced tablet market to take on Apple’s budget iPads, and Alphabet’s lower-priced Chromebook.

The company had unveiled Surface Go device around Jul 10, 2018 which was made available in early August, with prices ranging from $399 to $549 in the United States.

We believe that availability of Surface Go in India will position the company well to capitalize on the emerging EdTech market. Furthermore, the enhanced security and performance features hold promise in the growing enterprise market in the country.

Microsoft is likely to benefit from the competitive pricing of its Surface Go device. The latest Samsung Galaxy Tab S4 with 64 GB capacity is priced approximately at INR 57,900.

Microsoft Corporation Revenue (TTM)

Microsoft Corporation Revenue (TTM) | Microsoft Corporation Quote

In the words of Country General Manager, Consumer & Devices at Microsoft India, Priyadarshi Mohapatra, “Globally and in India, it’s encouraging to see the rapidly growing Surface community in both consumer and enterprise.”

Enhanced Security & Performance Features Hold Key

The compact Surface Go features a 10-inch screen and weighs 522 grams (or 1.15 pounds), lighter than its prevailing Surface counterparts. Further, the latest series is equipped with Intel’s INTC processor and graphic chips.

Additionally, the device has a decent nine hour battery life and canfunction with optional keyboard, mouse and Surface Pen 2.

Surface Go’s Windows Hello facial recognition option feature for logging-in and Windows 10 S mode, makes it a compelling option.

In a bid to enhance security and performance, users can utilize Microsoft Store appsincluding Microsoft Edge to browse safely.

Enterprises may avail Windows 10 Proto safeguard business infrastructure with robust security features. Windows Autopilot enables users to configure Surface Go from the cloud, in turn simplifying the IT processes a great deal.

Growing EdTech Market in India: Key Catalyst

India is witnessing demographic dividends, implying more and more people, students and professionals alike are undertaking smart courses in order to improve knowledge base to gain a competitive edge in their careers. This phenomenon has convinced analysts of the immense growth prospects of the burgeoning EdTech industry in India.

Reducing internet costs and increasing internet penetration in the country are other notable factors favoring the growth prospects of EdTech industry.

In fact, a research report from Google and KPMG estimates India’s online education industry to grow eight-fold to reach $1.96 billion by 2021. Further, the study projects paid users in EdTech to grow six times from 1.6 million in 2016 to 9.6 million in 2021.

Enemy’s Enemy an Ally?

One important point to note in this latest development is that Microsoft selected Flipkart’s e-commerce platform to launch Surface Go in India. Notably, Amazon AMZN and Flipkart are the two major players in Indian e-commerce market. Additionally, Walmart WMT acquired a 77% stake in Flipkart.

Microsoft Azure directly competes with Amazon’s cloud platform Amazon Web Services (“AWS”) in the cloud market. Walmart which competes with Amazon in the retail and e-commerce market has selected Azure cloud platform.

When we join the loose ends, it makes sense to say that “my enemy’s enemy is my friend.”

Our Take

Microsoft is well poised to benefit from robust adoption of Surface Go on the back of improving EdTech and enterprise scenario in India.

We believe the availability of Surface Go will aid the company in bolstering competitive strength in the direct consumer market, primarily in EdTech market in India.

Notably, Surface revenues increased 14% (same at cc) in first-quarter fiscal 2019 on a year-over-year basis on the back of strong performance of the latest editions – Surface Book 2 and Surface Go.

Moreover, Microsoft Surface series of devices have registered considerable double-digit growth in India in this year, as per Priyadarshi Mohapatra’s statement to IANS. The incremental sales from India will eventually benefit the top line.

Source: https://www.nasdaq.com/article/microsoft-msft-debuts-surface-go-in-india-via-flipkart-cm1076740

Betteru Education Corp. $BTRU.ca – Education A Necessity To Reduce Unemployment #Edtech $ARCL $CPLA $BPI $FC.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:52 AM on Thursday, December 27th, 2018
SPONSOR:  Betteru Education Corp.Connecting global leading educators to the mass population of India. BetterU Education has ability to reach 100 MILLION potential learners each week. Click here for more information.
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  • Education in India is a dire need to help reduce unemployment and increase economic activity in the country.
  • The setting up of physical schools is a time taking and expensive process, thereby slowing down the pace of eradicating education gap.

Online learning reduces dropouts as its more engaging, interesting and makes students more familiar with using computers

26 December, 2018 by Rajguru Tandon

A learning crisis in India seems imminent even as educational reforms surge ahead. Provision of schools does not guarantee the availability of necessary facilities in schools. The gap is still wide when compared to the enrolment of children in the school and learning outcome.

Captain Indraani Singh, Founder, and CEO, Literacy India talks about online education in India, technological advancements and Literacy India helping out students with the educational program. 

How can online education transform the Indian education sector?

Education in India is a dire need to help reduce unemployment and increase economic activity in the country. The setting up of physical schools is a time taking and expensive process, thereby slowing down the pace of eradicating education gap. While online education helps to reach more students in the least amount of time and is not expensive either. Therefore, online education can increase the speed of education in our country where digitization is spreading rapidly as well.

Besides, online learning enables students to engage with the subject matter, interact with course videos and learn at their own pace, which also reduces dropouts as its more engaging, interesting and makes students more familiar with using computers. On the other hand, it allows teachers to assign, monitor and evaluate coursework remotely, apart from highlighting the areas of students which need improvement.

How does Literacy India help drop-out students in the transition to education?

Literacy India’s technology-enabled remedial education program Gyantantra Udbhav has helped mainstream thousands of drop-out students. The program essentially enables these drop-out students who do not respond well to the confines of traditional classrooms and experience lack of access to education. The education program combines practical, intellectual and social attributes to create composite learning modules to help students complete school curriculum till Class 5. Embedded with an interactive multimedia interface, the modules are designed with a systematic instructional approach that makes learning fun, even for those who lack basic reading and writing skills. The tool tracks minimum levels of learning based on assessments and outcomes. Once students complete the program, they are eligible to join any other government school. 

How AI is being used in the system?

Gyantantra Udbhav is an interactive multimedia interface, which includes modules designed with a systematic instructional approach that makes learning fun, even for those who lack basic reading and writing skills. The tool tracks minimum levels of learning based on assessments and outcomes. It leverages gaming technology embedded with cartoon characters thereby ensuring effective retention of the information. As such the program is customized to bridge the learning gap which is of common existence among this set of children, who either are out-of-school or in-school children faltering on fundamental concepts. Understandably, technology and innovation with its various verticals such as IoT and AI have the ability to ably support the education mediums and increase efficiency and productivity of those involved like these children. Thus, it is with the integration of such new age technologies like artificial intelligence, machine learning or virtual reality that the learning experience will be more interactive and personalized thereby enhancing and improving access to education and learning.

Can technology improve engagement and result in better learning outcomes?

The most obvious benefit of technology run education is that it is subjective to the learner’s ability and level. Through virtual interactive engagement, it teaches students with different speeds depending on their backgrounds and more importantly different starting points. Also, technological education platform is cost-effective and time-efficient and is flexible to the needs of every single student— be it on-the-go, class of one, on-demand, gamified or crowdsourced.

 How can online education impact India’s education and development landscape?

Education is an important part of a country’s growth and development. It is not only about employment but also empowerment. Education serves as the front-runner in transforming the society, economy, and polity for better. Accompanied with technological advancements, that is online education, is then a game changer for a nation like India, which has an enormous population, with approximately 28 percent of children in the age group 0-14. Gyantantra program has been conceived to meet these very needs of the country, that is mass education and creating awareness about social and economic identity in a world marked by technological innovation. Ultimately, the future of education is to converge into the India’s new economy, which notably is fast on track to digitization. Online learning is then a natural step for the future generations and workforce in order to survive future technological disruptions.

Source: http://www.businessworld.in/article/Education-A-Necessity-To-Reduce-Unemployment-/26-12-2018-165553/

Betteru Education Corp. $BTRU.ca – #Naspers To Invest Almost $1bn In #Indian Online Businesses #Edtech

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:17 AM on Friday, December 21st, 2018
SPONSOR:  Betteru Education Corp.Connecting global leading educators to the mass population of India. BetterU Education has ability to reach 100 MILLION potential learners each week. Click here for more information.
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Naspers To Invest Almost $1bn In Indian Online Businesses

  • A day after it said it would lead a $540 million investment in education startup BYJU’S, Naspers announced it was making a $660 million investment in Swiggy, India’s largest food delivery platform
  • It is leading a nearly $1 billion Series H round in Swiggy, along with existing investors DST Global, Meituan Dianping and Coatue Management, and new investors Tencent, Hillhouse Capital and Wellington Management.

Toby Shapshak Contributor Enterprise & Cloud

Naspers is the most valuable listed company in Africa.Naspers

It’s been a busy week for Naspers, the largest public company in Africa, as it announced its listing on a secondary exchange in South Africa and nearly $1 billion in two significant online investments in India.

A day after it said it would lead a $540 million investment in education startup BYJU’S, Naspers announced it was making a $660 million investment in Swiggy, India’s largest food delivery platform. It is leading a nearly $1 billion Series H round in Swiggy, along with existing investors DST Global, Meituan Dianping and Coatue Management, and new investors Tencent, Hillhouse Capital and Wellington Management.

The BYJU’S investment – which includes a “significant portion” by the Canadian Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) – aims to grows the learning app, which has seen over 30 million students use it. It has over 2 million cumulative annual paid subscriptions, with an average engagement of 64 minutes per student daily.

Although it began as a newspaper business over 100 years ago, Naspers has diversified into pay television, ecommerce and owns a third of Tencent, the Chinese messaging and gaming giant. It is the largest emerging markets media and internet company in the world.

It has a large portfolio of investments in India, including online classifieds business OLX, leading online travel company MakeMyTrip, and payments company, PayU.

“Indian online consumers will be a significant driver of online growth in the world, and in addition to food and education,” Naspers said. “The quality of the best Indian entrepreneurs and their ability to build innovative businesses that address the unique needs of the Indian consumer offer unparalleled growth opportunities.”

In May, Naspers offloaded its stake in Flipkart, India’s largest ecommerce retailer, to Walmart.

Naspers is the largest listed company on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE), and was the first company in Africa to reach the magical R1 trillion figure. It is headquartered in Cape Town.

The secondary listing on 27 December on the A2X Markets exchange, which does not carry additional costs for companies listed in South Africa, is because A2X offers cheaper transaction fees and is more tech-savvy.

“A2X is one of a growing number of new exchanges that are leveraging technology in an effort to reduce trading costs and increase market transparency,” said Naspers CEO Bob van Dijk. “As one of the world’s leading technology investors we understand the value of technology and are pleased to support these efforts by also listing on A2X. We believe our shareholders will appreciate the added choice of trading venues.”

Earlier this year Naspers sold a 2% stake in Tencent for nearly $10 billion – to invest in more ecommerce ventures it said at the time – and announced in September it would spin off its MultiChoice satellite television unit into a separate company, to be called MultiChoice Africa. MultiChoice’s DStv is the largest satellite pay-television operator in Africa, using a network of satellites to deliver its signal across the continent.

Three years ago Naspers launched its own Showmax streaming service, which now operates in 36 countries in Africa and operates a pure-play streaming service in Poland.

I write about how innovation is better in Africa. I define innovation as solving problems, like the real problems we have in Africa. And solving those problems, solves them for the rest of the world. Africa isn’t just mobile-first, it’s mobile-only. I spoke about this at TED…

Shapshak is editor-in-chief and publisher of Stuff magazine. Based in Johannesburg, his TED talk on innovation in Africa has had more than 1.4m views.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/tobyshapshak/2018/12/21/naspers-to-invest-almost-1bn-in-indian-online-businesses/#49783b5a1f2d

Betteru Education Corp. $BTRU.ca – Online Higher Education in India Comes Full Circle $ARCL $CPLA $BPI $FC.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 3:23 PM on Wednesday, December 19th, 2018
SPONSOR:  Betteru Education Corp.Connecting global leading educators to the mass population of India. BetterU Education has ability to reach 100 MILLION potential learners each week. Click here for more information.
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  • Ever since the 2012 report stated that India needed thousands of new colleges and universities, it has been evident that India should instead focus on building disruptive innovations to rethink education by offering a service that is far more affordable, accessible, and convenient than the existing options.
  • That meant using online learning to serve people who would otherwise have no access to higher education.

By Brian Warren and Michael B. Horn (Columnist)  

In 2012, the government of India stated that it would need to build 1,000 new universities and an astounding 50,000 new colleges by 2020 to meet expected demand as its population and workforce continued to grow.

With over 750 universities and more than 38,000 colleges today—compared to roughly 650 universities and 25,000 colleges in 2012—the country looks unsurprisingly unlikely to meet that objective.

And that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Surveys and sources suggest many college graduates are unprepared for the workforce. For example, according to the All India Council for Technical Education, a whopping 60 percent of engineering graduates from India’s technical colleges remain unemployed each year.

Instead of replicating systems of higher education found elsewhere, India ought to be taking this opportunity to leapfrog the current state of higher education.

Ever since the 2012 report stated that India needed thousands of new colleges and universities, it has been evident that India should instead focus on building disruptive innovations to rethink education by offering a service that is far more affordable, accessible, and convenient than the existing options. That meant using online learning to serve people who would otherwise have no access to higher education.

And India did initially leverage online learning by allowing its universities and colleges to launch a wide range of online programs. But there were two problems. First, because existing higher-ed institutions drove the launch, their programs replicated aspects of Indian higher education online, rather than invent new ways to serve students who had no access previously—similar to what has happened in the United States in many cases.

Second, the initial online programs were of widely varying quality. Some reports suggested students didn’t learn much of anything, and were certainly not prepared to tackle real-world problems.

As a result, India cracked down on all online learning, with a moratorium on accredited universities offering online degrees in December of 2016.

Although this halted universities from innovating, it didn’t stop other Indian entities from innovating in online learning across the education spectrum. Corporations continued to offer online certificates, particularly in the coding and data analytics realms, and India’s largest education company, Byju’s, developed everything from next-generation interactive online simulations to top-of-the-line animation online video lessons. India’s higher-education system fell further behind when it came to leveraging online learning innovations.

This past August, India dipped its toe back into the online learning regulatory waters. But just its little toe.

The University Grants Commission, the national regulatory body for higher education that helps maintain standards and delegates funds to recognized universities and colleges, announced it will permit certain institutions to offer fully online certificate, diploma and degree programs in the 2018–2019 academic year.

To be eligible, institutions must be at least five years old, awarded a minimum score by the National Assessment and Accreditation Council, and rank among the top 100 colleges and universities, based on a national evaluative framework, for two of the past three years. The degree program must also mirror pre-made, face-to-face courses that have already graduated a cohort of students and have been previously approved by the statutory councils—in other words, replicate the existing system.

These new rules sound like those of yesteryear’s—and that’s a problem.

By replicating a system that India’s citizens and employers already say doesn’t produce workforce-ready graduates, it’s not clear why this wave of online learning will work better than the last. Although the Commission is allowing only the top 100 institutions in India in an effort to control quality, it’s really just cementing in place the current system of higher education.

That input-based approach to regulation, in which the resources and processes of a class are controlled, will, by definition, freeze innovation because it limits how programs may deliver their services. It also ignores the question of student outcomes at the program level, such that there will be little accountability.

There’s a better approach.

Lost amidst the changing rules and regulations is a focus on student outcomes—and, in this case, critical measures that connect education to the economy. (Some of these measures are outlined in a quality assurance framework that we researched and developed.) The government of India ought to incentivize institutions to compete on delivering what’s best for students, while keeping costs down to increase value and promote access. By maintaining a quality threshold, the Commission could invite many players to enter the online higher education market and innovate around quality and access, which could help India meet its demand to educate more citizens for the workforce.

India could also be the first in the world to pioneer such a progressive approach—and it could do so by first targeting the policy at online universities, not the entire system, which would be far too revolutionary at this stage.

The Commission ought to reconsider its choice. They can stay with the status quo and implement piecemeal adjustments in the hope that the outcomes match their intentions, or they can adopt a strategy of bold innovation with robust student-outcome protocols that don’t leave students’ success up to chance. From our standpoint, that shouldn’t be a choice.

Michael Horn (@michaelbhorn) is an EdSurge columnist and Principal Consultant for Entangled Solutions. Brian Warren is a consultant at Entangled Solutions.

Source: https://www.edsurge.com/news/2018-12-19-online-higher-education-in-india-comes-full-circle

Betteru Education Corp. $BTRU.ca – #Edtech unicorn #Byju’s raise $400 million; makes total valuation $4 billion $ARCL $CPLA $BPI $FC.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 3:28 PM on Tuesday, December 11th, 2018
SPONSOR:  Betteru Education Corp.Connecting global leading educators to the mass population of India. BetterU Education has ability to reach 100 MILLION potential learners each week. Click here for more information.
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  • Edtech unicorn Byju’s raise $400 million from Canada’s CPP Investment Board, Naspers Ventures, General Atlantic and some existing investors, according to documents filed with the Registrar of Companies (RoC).
  • The transaction is expected to value the startup at around $4 billion, making it one of the top five most valuable startups in India, along with Flipkart ($22 billion), Paytm ($16 billion), Oyo ($5 billion) and Ola ($4 billion).

The transaction has made Byju’s one of the top five most valuable startups in India along with Flipkart, Paytm, Oyo and Ola. 

Edtech unicorn Byju’s raise $400 million from Canada’s CPP Investment Board, Naspers Ventures, General Atlantic and some existing investors, according to documents filed with the Registrar of Companies (RoC).

The transaction is expected to value the startup at around $4 billion, making it one of the top five most valuable startups in India, along with Flipkart ($22 billion), Paytm ($16 billion), Oyo ($5 billion) and Ola ($4 billion).

Byju Raveendran

According to other media sources, the company is expected to use the newly infused funds to expand its presence overseas.

Byju’s was launched in 2009 as an online video-based learning for CAT through VSAT. The Byju’s app creates personalised learning programmes for individual students based on their proficiency levels and capabilities, which help them learn at their own pace and style.

Since then Byju’s has raised more than $240 million from Tencent, Verlinvest, Chan-Zuckerberg Initiative, Sequoia Capital, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Aarin Capital and others.

In June 2018, the company turned profitable after crossing Rs 100 crore in monthly revenues. In July, it acquired learning platform Math Adventures, and in September this year, Byju’s raised $100 million in a private equity round.

The e-learning market is vast in India with corporate professionals and startups alike doing well in the market. According to a report,the online education market in India is poised to grow at a CAGR of 20.02 percent during the period 2017-2021.

Byju’s claims that its learning app has 22 million registered students and 1.4 million annual paid subscribers. The app also sees an addition of 1.5 million registered students every month. Byju’s has been growing at 100 percent annually since its learning app was launched in 2015, and has a renewal rate of 85 percent from its subscribers.

Source: https://yourstory.com/2018/12/byjus-raises-400-million-total-valuation-4-billion/

Good Life Networks $GOOD.ca Vital takeouts from the world’s largest programmatic advertising conference $TTD $RUBI $AT.ca $TRMR $FUEL

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 2:00 PM on Friday, December 7th, 2018

Sponsor: Good Life Networks: Video advertising is the future! Company’s A.I. makes 80,000 calculations / second, targeting 750 million users to deliver higher prices and volume. The company achieved a record $9.7 Million in revenue for 2017 and recently announced entering the video game industry with programmatic technology. Click here for more information

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  • In 2018, more than $47 billion in the US was spent on programmatic display advertising with Facebook and Google taking a large chunk of the pie. By 2020, that figure will climb to nearly $69 billion.

Posted By: Ashleigh Footiton:November 28, 2018

After an intense two days spent at the world’s largest conference on programmatic advertising, Programmatic I/O, it was fascinating to see how US online publishers are utilising data and selling inventory programmatically.

In 2018, more than $47 billion in the US was spent on programmatic display advertising with Facebook and Google taking a large chunk of the pie. By 2020, that figure will climb to nearly $69 billion.

In the United States, there are an average of 14.5 programmatic tech partners per publisher, whereas in South Africa, we have an average of just three. This is not a bad situation to be in as our ecosystem is less fragmented and we have more control over our inventory. But it does highlight that programmatic is still in its infancy here.  

One of the US speakers, Taylor Schreiner at Adobe, said, “Organisations are transforming to take advantage of programmatic. Brands are now more hands-on. They have a better understanding of the metrics they are facing, and they’re more specific in their directives to agencies. We’re seeing more clients who now have people in the organisation who are in a position to think about reach across channels.”

First party data, which is essential for publishers, was another big theme that came through. It is a priority as it gives a competitive advantage in fighting against the duopoly that is Google and Facebook, who account for around 50% of programmatic revenue in the US. Their amazing audience intelligence, reach and measurement capabilities which advertisers are not going to pass up keeps them on top.

Relationships are key in this fragmented industry. The display ad tech Lumascape highlighted this fact. There are many touch points available when it comes to making a deal and publishers need to ensure they are talking to all parties involved. There is no such thing as ‘set it and forget it’. Secondly, CPM rates are lost to tech costs and the publisher comes out with only a fraction of what the seller initially spends.

The issue of viewability

The issue of viewability came across a lot throughout the two day conference. A viewable ad is defined as 50% of the pixels of a regular creative or 30% of the pixels of a large size creative, are on an in-focus browser tab on the viewable space of the browser page for a minimum of one continuous second. (This description was even questioned a few times by brands.) As far as many brands were concerned, 100% viewability has to be a non-negotiable and advertisers/buyers should not pay for a non-viewable ad.

Artificial Intelligence was also strong presence with a few interesting developments on the cards. We can’t escape the fact that AI is and will be an essential part of our lives. The Nest Cam Indoor security camera, for instance, learns who the regular members of your household are. If a stranger or visitor is in your home, Nest reports back to you immediately via your connected device. The Ricoh whiteboard is another great AI example – once you’ve made your notes on it you can email the contents to anyone around the world, with full translation capabilities. All of these things will add to the wonder that is big data which ultimately will assist advertisers to better target consumers.

And then there’s brand safety

It was evident that there’s a need for deeper conversations on brand safety between publishers, agencies and brands who all need to understand and explain what brand safety means to each of them. Some brands mentioned that they won’t pay if creative appears in a negative environment. However, they would consider an environment that has a positive spin next to controversial content. Unfortunately, safety tools are screening out these environments if the story contains blacklisted key words. Private market places need to be of more help. 

Ad fraud and fake news is rife in the US industry, and ad fraud specifically, but on a lesser scale, here in South Africa. Publishers are fighting hard against these practices and buyers are turning to technology to assist with eliminating and reducing their ad spend on these practices that deceive.

There are many types of ad fraud but in general challenges in programmatic include invalid traffic (IVT), domain spoofing, page level scripting, ad injection, and poor user experience. Low-quality human traffic is another issue, through paid media channels (including click bait) traffic is pushed to transit hubs by fake authors and instantaneously bounce off these sites, purely to serve ads and receive ad revenue. These are all things that advertisers and publishers need to be cognisant of. Publishers need to adopt ads.txt as a non-negotiable and advertisers need to be selective when buying inventory across the open market.

I learned that a dollar in does not equal a dollar out when it comes to programmatic and intermediaries are more prevalent than thought. But most importantly, relationships are more important now than ever before. Successful partnerships between publishers, agencies and clients are open and honest about what works for them.

The conference gave invaluable insights into the world of programmatic and even though we have some catching up to do, it’s an exciting time in our industry.

Ashleigh Footit is head of techops, programmatic and performance at SPARK Media. She was responsible for establishing the programmatic division for the group in 2015 and have been one of the key drivers in the implementation, management and success of Caxton’s Supply Side and Data Management Platform.

Source: https://themediaonline.co.za/2018/11/vital-takeouts-from-the-worlds-largest-programmatic-advertising-conference/


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Online Education for India

Online education has become popular among working professionals and students in higher education. These categories of online learners find immense benefit in the autonomy, and flexibility, that these courses offer.

Online courses can be planned into their schedule, which may include full-time employment, internships and caring for a family. It can also help them take out quiet time to study.

Online learning in an education system

Distance learning has been around for a long time, even before technology made it extremely accessible. Traditional schooling is now seeing an increased proliferation of virtual training materials and online courses. Even in a world of tried and tested schooling systems and curricula, the most successful schools are the ones who adapt to the changing times, as well as to the expectations of students, parents and the society.

If online education is here to stay, then what are its implications for traditional learning? Instead of focusing on pros and cons, the conversation we should be having today is about leveraging online learning to make our education system more conductive to learning.

Setting goals, tracking progress and meeting deadlines

Online courses involve setting our own goals, tracking progress and meeting deadlines

Online courses call for a greater amount of motivation and self-discipline than a classroom-based course. A classroom has one or more instructors and peers, who can hold a student accountable for their course-work. In contrast, online courses involve setting our own goals, tracking progress and meeting deadlines.

One does not learn in isolation, so online courses do offer discussion forums, email, and one-on-one support. Technology also adds on to the visual experience by incorporating animations, that can be used interactively for effective teaching, and communication.

The classroom advantage

A school provides structure, support, and a system of rewards and penalties to groom its students. Classroom education has the benefit of face-to-face interactions with peers, which are typically moderated by a teacher.

It provides children, especially those in their early developmental years, with a stable environment for social interactions, helping them develop skills like boundary setting, empathy, and cooperation. This also allows plenty of room for spontaneity, unlike a virtual learning setup.

Online education in the context of schooling

As students’ progress to higher classes, they seek more autonomy and intellectual freedom. Online learning can help them pursue highly individualized learning programmes, possibly even college-level courses. These, combined with hands-on exercises, real-world exploration, and thorough assessments, can be highly beneficial to their learning progress.

Here’s what the Managing Director of Trio World Academy said:

“They can explore their options, by trying out introductory topics from different fields, before committing to a specialization. Online learning platforms can help these students become more independent learners before they make their way into college,” said Naveen K M.

“I believe that we must not hold students back from picking any online course, but instead act as their guide as they navigate through it,” he added.

Teachers and parents should act as anchors and mentors

Teachers and parents should be anchors and mentors

Mobile apps that provide enhanced learning opportunities for school children have become mainstream. Since mobile phones have already found their way into their hands, these apps are being used to supplement classroom learning.

Teachers and parents need to act as anchors and mentors, curating the kind of educational content students are exposed to, during the tricky phase of finding the right career to pursue.

Programmes to support families wishing home-school

Virtual public schools, that offer a full scale K12 education, have already sprung up in some parts of the world. They even offer a combination of the traditional system with online education. There are programmes that provide support to families that wish to home-school their children, in the form of online course material.

These programmes bring parents and teachers into the fold, by involving them into their child’s education from the get-go. However, their effectiveness in the long term needs to be studied.

Online programmes for weaker communities

Online programmes for weaker sections

Online learning programmes will also open up opportunities for children from weaker socio-economic communities, who possess a limited access to learning resources i.e. teachers, textbooks and infrastructure.

It will connect them to a global network of online learners, exposing them to new perspectives. The ideas that they receive, will not be limited by the number of heads in one classroom.

Read: How to judge the quality of any online course before you join one

Online education for educators

Online education can also be designed to be accommodating of a variety of learning styles among students.

“As educators, it is likely that we will have to put in additional efforts to incorporate online learning programmes into the curriculum, in the most suitable manner,” said the managing director.

Online training programmes are helping teachers/educators advance their skills in curriculum implementation, policy, education systems and leadership, both independently and with the support of their institutions.

It lets them collaborate with their peers, and learn new instructional skills, that are relevant to their career. These programmes can help them develop new skills and capabilities in their students, with the help of technology and interdisciplinary approaches.

Education for future

As the overlap of the traditional and online educational worlds is becoming more and more inevitable, we owe it to our students to make their education relevant to their future, through our own ingenuity, passion and careful planning.

-Authored article by Naveen K M, Managing Director, Trio World Academy

Source:https://www.indiatoday.in/education-today/featurephilia/story/online-learning-education-system-1401364-2018-12-03

Betteru Education Corp. $BTRU.ca – E-learning is changing #India’s mindscape #adtech $ARCL $CPLA $BPI $FC.ca

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  • Vamsi Krishna, CEO & co-founder of Vedantu, told Mint that his Bangalore-based e-learning company had managed to raise  $11 million in a Series B funding round
  • Vedantu, an interactive online tutoring platform where teachers provide school tuitions to students over the internet, using a real-time virtual learning environment named WAVE, a technology built in-house

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On November 24, 2018,  Vamsi Krishna, CEO & co-founder of Vedantu, told Mint that his Bangalore-based e-learning company had managed to raise  $11 million in a Series B funding round. Vedantu is of course  an interactive online tutoring platform where teachers provide school tuitions to students over the internet, using a real-time virtual learning environment named WAVE, a technology built in-house.

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Vedantu, which means ‘knowledge network,’ offers learning flexibility with group sessions costing Rs 50-150 and a private session priced at Rs300-600. The fresh repository of funding will help the company expand and penetrate tier 2 and tier 3 where their group sessions are already doing well. The app already services 80 cities including Bengaluru, Mumbai and Delhi, and also caters to students from 36 countries and 1,200 cities, Vedantu at present tutors students from 6th to 12th grade and visualises in the near future, its entry into the GMAT and GRE competitive space.

And in a technological development initiative that will truly push e-learning beyond the regular methodolgies, the company will aim to make the sessions more personalized by tracking the student’s attention span and concept understanding using machine learning, facial recognition etc.

In this Moneycontrol Deep Dive podcast, we will examine the boom in the e-learning business-scape in India.

According a joint study by Google and KPMG, the online education sector in India is estimated to grow at a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 52 percent to $1.96 billion by 2021. But coming back to the Vedantu story.

Krishna is a graduate of the Indian Institute of Technology-Bombay and founded the company in 2014 with Anand Prakash and Pulkit Jain. Mint recalls how they had previously co-founded Lakshya where they also taught.

Even though, Lakshya mentored more than 10,000 students and trained more than 200 teachers, its brick-and-mortar coaching center, was sold to MT Educare Ltd in 2012.

Krishna told Mint, “Even though Vendantu is a four-year-old company, the idea was born while we were at Lakshya. We wanted to bring good teaching to every student, which would have taken a very long time in a brick-and-mortar setting. So we decided to sell Lakshya and develop the tech for our new company,”

The idea that brick and mortar structures are obsolete for expansive learning is at the core of the e-learning boom in India.

Learning without barriers

 Not just Vedantu, but most e-learning businesses including Byju’s (Think & Learn Pvt. Ltd) and Unacademy (Sorting Hat Technologies Pvt. Ltd) understand the limitations of conventional teaching and learning and the potential of technology driven educational models that can reinvent themselves to keep up with the evolving needs of the students.

Technology has undoubtedly a wider reach than brick and mortal structures and says Mint, “Investors are betting big on such content start-ups because they can reach the 200-300 million new internet users from tier 2 and tier 3 cities. More than a dozen content deals that together amount to over $400 million are expected to be closed before the end of the year.”

And Vedantu is not the only one to benefit from this boom. Unacademy has raised a neat $21 million in a Series C round and Byju’s is set to raise $200-300 million from private equity giant General Atlantic. Mint reported in September. We quote, “In addition, Byju’s is expected to be valued at $3.5 billion, which will make it India’s fourth most valuable start-up behind digital payments firm Paytm (One97 Communications Pvt. Ltd), cab-hailing service Ola, and budget hotel chain Oyo Rooms.”

Low investment, high returns

 The upsurge in e-learning enterprises could partly be attributed to inexpensive data costs and the increased access  to high-speed internet  and with half a billion more Indians expected to be online for the first time in the near future , there is no reason to think small.

Others big dreamers in this space apart from Vedantu, Byjus and Unacademy are Meritnation, Cuemath and Toppr. The numbers speak for themselves.

Post the reports in October that e-learning giant Byju’s may achieve 4th rank in India’s startups class, founder Byju Raveendran claimed his company was among the few profitable Indian unicorns. What is a unicorn in business terms?

Well, it is a privately held startup company valued at over $1 billion. The term was coined in 2013 by venture capitalist Aileen Lee, choosing the mythical animal to represent the statistical rarity of such successful ventures. And Raveendran was not being immodest because in June, the company  touched ₹100 crore in monthly revenue and raised its annual revenue target to ₹ 1,400 crore.

The brand’s burgeoning success is now a Harvard Business School case study.

Mint had first reported in July and September that Byju’s was in talks to raise fresh funds at a valuation of over $2 billion. Since then, investor demand has increased even more.

“Byju’s is part of a small but growing number of tech startups that have rapidly grown their businesses and consistently attracted blue-chip investors. In July 2017, Byju’s raised about $40 million from Tencent Holdings Ltd, months after raising $30 million from Verlinvest. S

ince starting out in 2008, Byju’s has raised over $240 million from Tencent, Verlinvest, Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, Sequoia Capital, Lightspeed Venture Partnersand Aarin Capital, among others,” said Mint.

Bridging the infrastructure and quality divide

 It goes without saying that that education in India has not dispersed quality in equal proportions.  As Roman Saini, co-­founder and chief educator of Unacademy wrote in the Hindustan Times on November 8, 2018 and we quote, “The education divide in India with respect to quality and accessibility has existed for far too long. It is difficult for the existing physical infrastructure to meet the learning needs of the burgeoning population of our country which will touch 1.5 billion by 2030 and 1.7 billion by 2050 (equal to the population of China and USA combined). Digital is gaining acceptance across numerous sectors and it is only right that the education sector too reaps benefits of this digital transformation.”

As he points out, there are barriers created by inadequate infrastructure, concentrated content and language issues that prevent large numbers of knowledge-hungry demographics from the benefits of a global education.

As he says, “It is impossible to have great teachers in each and every village/district in India. Similarly, the best teachers should not be restricted to certain institutes of the world. This is where e-learning comes in. It can level the playing field for all students. Students, in both rural and urban areas, can get access to the best learning resources, learn at their own pace and in the comfort of their own homes. Another key advantage with e-learning is that it is much easier to design courses with the latest online reference material than publishing crores of books.”

The possibility that online education could benefit India’s youth, that forms more than 50% of the population, is exciting for e-learning entrepreneurs, educators and potential learners.

New methods of teaching

 Class room learning has its benefits and drawbacks but e-learning expands the scope, depth and reach of information with tools like gamification, that Roman says will ensure in the future that the learning process is more interactive and fulfilling.

And e-learning does not have to be impersonal because live online interaction between the students and educators can offer attention and connection that is not just virtual.

Roman says, “The role of AI and technology in all of this will be huge. AI Bots can act as study assistants that will accompany you along your learning journey. It will know your strengths and weakness inside out and will even recommend what you should read on a given day to maximise your learning outcomes.”

Byju Raveendran, of Byju’s believes e-learning can develop and inculcate personal initiative in students and that bodes well for their future success as opposed to the “spoon feeding” that conventional education dispenses.

He is a living example of personal initiative and told Mint in April 2017, that even when he was not an education entrepreneur, he was known for pre-exam hacks and short cuts that made him an exceptional student.

And good students more often than not turn out to be good educators.

After nailing a perfect score in CAT twice and after turning down interview calls from all the Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs), and working abroad for a couple of years, he decided to take six months out to see what would happen if  what he had learnt was taught with a structure.

So successful was his module, recalls Mint, that Raveendran started conducting workshops on the weekend, with the classes growing in popularity. When one classroom wasn’t enough to accommodate students, he booked an auditorium with a seating capacity of 1,200. From jetsetting across India to teach, he decided to take his modules to students and a success story was born in 2011.

At the core of his teaching module and business model is not derivation but independence, logic and life skills.  Soon he started using a video format. Today as Mint informed, his high-production-value videos and content caters to the K-12 (kindergarten-Class XII) segment, with more than 500 members in the research and development team.

Big numbers that keep getting bigger

 The e-learning entrepreneurs know that they are on to something. As Mint reported, “There are about 20 million children between Classes VI and XII in India who have access to the Internet and take private coaching classes, which translates to an addressable market opportunity of about $2.5 billion, according to research by consulting firm RedSeer Consulting.”

Not surprising then that since launching in 2015, the Byju’s app has had more than six million downloads. It had 3,20,000 active users as of November last year. The number of people who buy its premium service is growing every month, claims the firm.

The paper also quotes Kunal Walia, founder and managing partner at Khetal Advisors, a Bengaluru-based investment bank that has worked with multiple education start-ups, “A great company will be converting anywhere around 8-12 percent of people who try out their app. 8-12 percent is a fairly high number given the fact that in education your ticket sizes are larger as well. You’re no longer selling a Rs500-product or a Rs 200-product, you’re selling a product which runs into thousands of rupees. Also, with education, unlike most of the sectors, the repeat rates are very high. For example, a student would start with Byju’s in the sixth standard or seventh, so Byju’s is looking at a four-year or seven-year timeline in certain cases, where they can continue to tap into the same user.”

The B2C gameplan

 Not just Byju’s, but many successful e- learning initiatives have gauged the business-to-consumer (B2C) market effectively by making their services user and cost friendly so that both children and parents are convinced by the apps ability to deliver and engage.

Personalising virtual learning is a big part of that. Byju’s for instance has designed personalized learning through what it calls a “knowledge graph”. Mint informs that with this, the app learns which concepts a student may need more practice at, and adjusts learning plans accordingly.

Raveendran also told Mint and we quote, “Our product and go-to-market are both targeted at students. B2C is our only channel. We’re not trying to change the system. It can easily coexist with the system. It’s not a replacement of teachers.”

Byju’s offline presence also helped in gaining parents’ trust in the brand, according to Walia of Khetal Advisors.Byju’s dream is to take education deeper and try and bridge India’s rural and urban divide and to create a learning culture where students learn and not just memorize. And develop a life-long thirst for knowledge that was earlier restricted by the fear of exams.  The Byju’s smartphone app—and portal apart from offering study material for classes 4-12, also offers help to succeed at competitive exams like JEE, NEET, CAT, IAS, GRE and GMAT.

The positively disruptive force of e-learning

 In August this year, Priya Singh wrote in Sunday Guardian just how digital technology has proved to be a disruptive force for the education sector, changing the old paradigms of teaching and helping create the climate for more personalised forms of learning.

The reason why e-learning apps are growing popular in India is because they are challenging one dimensional teaching and  emphasising “method” over the expertise of teachers, she wrote and added, “According to this new model of education, driven for the most part by digital technology, the teacher is sidelined, as content—as learning—takes centre stage.”

She also cites Byju’s success to prove her point, she cites the numbers that deserve to be repeated here. The platform now has over 22 million registered users, 1.4 million paid subscribers, an addition of 1.5 million registered users every month, more than 100% growth and the pride of becoming the first Asian company to get investment from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, the philanthropic organisation founded by Facebook’s boss Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan. And all this was achieved in just three years.

The article informs also how the disruptive presence of technology has also educated teachers to adapt to the changing learning environment.

Not surprisingly then some platforms are not content with offering supplementary modules but also short-term degree courses.

We quote, “One such example is Simplilearn, an online certification and training platform with offices in Bangalore. They offer online courses in cyber security, cloud computing, project management, digital marketing and data science among other subjects. “

The possibilities of learning online are inexhaustible and  Coursera, a California-based online learning platform that offers certified courses from the world’s best universities—including Yale, Princeton and Stanford—has been adding rapidly to its subscriber base in India, informs the piece.

Raghav Gupta, Director, India and APAC, Coursera told the Sunday Guardian, “India has a lot to gain from online learning. About one million people enter the workforce every month with no guarantee that they will have the competencies to succeed in jobs of the future. Even as technology renders many skills obsolete, online learning will be the transformative force that empowers millions to acquire new skills. We see this trend reflected in our growth in India. We now have 3.3 million Indian learners on the platform, while adding 60,000 new users every month. Our platform is giving employers and professionals the much-needed opportunity to access the best and most relevant content the world has to offer and learn the skills needed to compete in the new economy.” Unquote.

Another big player, says the piece, is edX, a “massive open online course” (MOOC) platform, founded by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University. It offers courses on subjects like artificial intelligence, machine learning, data science, business and management, leadership, soft skills, and so on.

We quote Amit Goyal, Head, India and South East Asia, edX, “Lack of employer recognition and academic credits are the sonic barriers of online learning in India and the world. Companies like edX are now offering university credits for their online programmes. For example, edX credit-backed MicroMasters programs can be taken completely online, and every programme leads to an on-campus master’s level credential at an accelerated and cost-efficient manner. Students can save approximately 20-50% of their on-campus degree time and money after completing edX MicroMasters programme.”

India incidentally forms the second largest learner base for edX, after the USA.

And Goyal believes, e-learning is going to bridge the digital divide in India and that educational institutes who may not afford high-quality teachers can increase their teaching standards by referring to online courses taught by world-class professors and adopt flip-learning pedagogy.

Observers and most e-learning businesses know that classroom learning cannot be replaced but it can be updated.

The piece quotes Divya Gokulnath of Byju’s, “Technology has played a key role in disrupting this sector and will continue to shape the teacher-student relationship by offering better accessibility, distribution and formats of delivery.” The combined power of artificial intelligence, machine learning and data analytics, she says will reshape learning.

The potential for growth is endless

 A piece published in India Today by Varun Saxena, Founder, Career Anna another online learning platform cited a report by KPMG, that the Indian online education industry will register a 6X growth in 2021. From 1.6 million users in 2016, it will grow to 9.6 million users by 2021. It will also be worth $1.96 billion.

“Projections show that the e-learning market worldwide is forecast to surpass 243 billion US dollars by 2022. It clearly shows that e-learning has become a global trend, and more and more people are preferring it over traditional classrooms,” said the article.

One reason for this shift, according to Varun is that the number of jobs involving routine skills — both physical and cognitive — is shrinking, and with increasing automation, newer opportunities are being created every day.

We quote, “Co-branded courses with corporates and educational institutes having live industry projects, real-time mentoring and peer to peer interactions on an online platform, with an exposure to connect with anyone across the globe interested in a same skill set is another main reason to help online learning score a brownie point over traditional learning which limits one to brick and mortar, or to a particular location and city.”

The dream of learning from a Harvard professor in a small Indian town, no longer seems impossible.

Varun sums it up, “Online learning is hence, steadily disrupting the hackneyed chalk and talk’ education system in India because of the immense benefits it has to offer.” Unquote.

The need to connect the unconnected

 Digital education however must expand beyond eager urban markets to regions that do not have ready internet accessibility.

As YourStory stated in a November piece this year, “The Internet has helped us in many ways – from education to entertainment. But what about areas that cannot connect to the internet?”

The answer, the piece informs is Chhota Internet – a Content Access Management Device (CAMD) that can help make education accessible to all.

“In a district of Ghaziabad in Uttar Pradesh, 197 upper primary schools will adopt Chhota Internet to increase learning opportunities for their students. Using this, the schools will be able to access better quality educational material over a WiFi network without using the internet. This digital initiative will also allow schools to focus on each student’s progress and help them design custom-based programmes to further enhance a student’s performance. Digital literacy, when harnessed in a controlled and responsible environment, can help schools find, evaluate, utilise, share and create content using information technologies and the internet.”

Inventions like Chhota Internet thus  can serve as a shot in the arm of  traditional educational system in the rural area and work past issues like lack of internet penetration, shortage of quality teachers etc.

The piece quotes Sandeep Arya, CEO and Chairman of Chhota Internet, “As rural India prepares for a tectonic change in education with the launch of digital classrooms, we need to ensure consistent implementation of digital literacy on a large-scale to ensure quality education. More of this can happen when corporations direct their CSR funds to this cause instead of solely depending upon government funding. Chhota Internet will achieve this by bringing students in rural India abreast with the rest of the world, in terms of providing access to a more advanced system of education that is loaded with the latest technological aids, paving the way for future growth via innovative technology.”

A revolution indeed is not a revolution unless it benefits the ones with the least amount of privilege and hopefully initiatives like Chhota Internet will take e-learning to the farthest reaches of a demographically and geographically diverse country like India.

Source: https://www.moneycontrol.com/news/business/podcast-digging-deeper-e-learning-is-changing-indias-mindscape-3235601.html