Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

NITI Aayog invites students to tackle data science challenges

- Sarah Zia sarah.z@htlive.com

NEWDELHI: NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant invited students to develop technologi­es that could act as disruptors in the education sector.

Addressing a group of students at an artificial intelligen­ce (AI) hackathon event at IIT Delhi, he said that while the country was growing at a rate of 7.6% currently, students needed to look beyond textbooks to create disruptive technologi­es that could enable the country to grow at a higher rate.

Urging students to use artificial intelligen­ce and data science, he asked them to provide sustainabl­e solutions to two problems. The first being creation of prediction models based on very large datasets collected by both government and private schools to identify the biggest influence on students’ performanc­e.

The second challenge is to create language learning tools and conversati­on agents capable of understand­ing different grammars to enable learning across diverse linguistic groups and eliminate language barriers. The best proposals will be awarded by NITI Aayog.

He suggested that students think of technologi­es that could be applied to solve problems related to India. “Silicon Valley is a hub of innovation with technology-based products like war machines and driverless cars but these are not relevant to the Indian context,” he said.

According to him, what needed attention were issues such as how to make India sewage free and how to provide arsenic and fluoride free drinking water in rural areas.

Finding solutions to these problems would not just help 1.2 billion people of India but 7 billion people who could move from poverty to middle class across the world.

Congratula­ting the participan­ts of the hackathon, Kant announced that NITI Aayog was building an open data portal which would host non-personalis­ed secondary data created by the government with combined data sets for visualisat­ion. Researcher­s were expected to utilised AI and natural language processing for an easier search as well as train their algorithms to utilise these datasets, he explained.

Currently, NITI Aayog supports 1000 tinkering labs under the Atal Innovation Mission to enable students to go beyond books to solve problems from an earlier age with plans to increase this number in place.

Emphasisin­g on the need for innovative technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce, Kant said that while scientists in India produced extensive research, the real challenge lay in applying technologi­es to the key sectors of education, healthcare and nutrition.

“To get the advantage of the demographi­c dividend, we need to move forward in the area of education where we have succeeded in providing access but the quality of education has fallen,” he said.

The next ten years were extremely critical to India’s growth where we could either leapfrog or remain relegated to a developing country’s status, he added.

According to him, the role of artificial intelligen­ce and data science was thus, crucial to this sector and could solve problems related to quality, scale and access.

The event was organised by OpenEd.ai.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Amitabh Kant
MINT/FILE Amitabh Kant

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