Indian Institute of Technology Madras has opened admissions for its BS programmes in Data Science and Applications and Electronic Systems without requiring JEE Main or JEE Advanced scores, creating a new pathway for students to access IIT education.
Applications for the programmes are open until June 5, 2026, through the institute’s official admission portal. The initiative is aimed at expanding opportunities for students who may not have pursued or qualified through the highly competitive JEE route.
Instead of entrance through national-level engineering examinations, applicants will undergo a four-week online foundation course that covers basic mathematics, English and coding skills. Students who successfully clear the qualifying examination after the course will gain direct admission into the BS programmes.
The institute has also stated that there is no cap on the number of seats, making the programme significantly more accessible compared to traditional IIT undergraduate admissions.
The initiative aligns with the vision of the National Education Policy 2020, which emphasises flexible, inclusive and multidisciplinary higher education models. The programme structure allows multiple exit options depending on the duration of study completed.
Students can receive a foundation certificate after one year, a diploma after two years, a bachelor’s degree after three years, or continue for the complete four-year BS programme that grants IIT Madras alumni status.
Eligibility extends to all Class 12 graduates from recognised boards, while even Class 11 students can apply in advance and begin the preparatory process early. The BS in Electronic Systems requires students to have studied Physics and Mathematics, whereas the Data Science programme is open to students from all streams with a basic mathematics background.
Education experts believe the initiative could significantly diversify the student demographic at IIT Madras by attracting learners from smaller towns, remote regions and non-traditional academic backgrounds. The flexible online structure is also expected to benefit working professionals and students unable to relocate for conventional campus-based programmes.
Observers note that if the model proves successful, it may encourage other IITs to introduce similar non-JEE admission pathways in emerging technology domains such as artificial intelligence, electronics and data science.
At the same time, traditional JEE-based admissions are expected to remain the primary route for flagship BTech engineering programmes across the IIT system.
Researchers at the Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati have developed an advanced nanomaterial-based technology aimed at strengthening protection against counterfeit currency, forged documents and fake products.
The breakthrough, published in Advanced Optical Materials, uses specially engineered perovskite nanocrystals that produce highly secure light-emitting patterns resistant to heat, chemicals, and environmental damage.
Scientists say the innovation could significantly improve anti-counterfeiting systems at a time when modern forgery techniques are becoming increasingly sophisticated and capable of replicating conventional security features with high precision.
The IIT Guwahati team designed the nanocrystals using a unique double-layer protective coating that preserves their optical performance while improving stability. The material emits highly pure and intense colours with narrow emission ranges, creating precise optical signatures that are difficult to duplicate.
Researchers explained that these properties allow the technology to function as a “4D anti-counterfeiting” system, adding an extra layer of authentication complexity beyond visible security markings.
Using direct laser writing technology, the team successfully created microscopic security patterns without requiring lithographic masks. The process achieved resolutions between 10 and 40 micrometres, enabling highly detailed patterns capable of storing encoded information for secure identification and verification.
According to the researchers, the intricate designs and specialised material behaviour make replication extremely challenging for counterfeiters, as they would need to reproduce not only the visible patterns but also the unique optical and environmental responses of the nanocrystals.
Beyond security applications, the technology may also find use in next-generation consumer electronics. Scientists noted that the same nanocrystal-based approach could support the development of micro-LED displays for smartphones, wearable devices and augmented reality systems.
Experts believe the innovation has the potential to transform authentication systems across sectors such as banking, pharmaceuticals, luxury goods and official documentation. If adopted widely, it could contribute to establishing more advanced global standards for anti-counterfeiting technologies.
However, researchers also acknowledged that large-scale adoption may depend on manufacturing costs, industry integration and regulatory support. Industry observers suggest that collaboration between research institutions, policymakers and private companies will be essential for translating the laboratory breakthrough into commercial and public security applications.
Pushkar Singh Dhami on Friday distributed appointment letters to 483 selected candidates for posts in the irrigation and agriculture departments during a programme held at Chief Sevak Sadan at the Chief Minister’s camp office in Uttarakhand.
According to the state government, 473 candidates were appointed to the irrigation department, while 10 candidates received appointments in the agriculture department.
During the event, the chief minister paid tribute to former Uttarakhand chief minister Bhuvan Chandra Khanduri and recalled his emphasis on providing opportunities to youth through merit and hard work.
Addressing the newly appointed candidates, Dhami said the appointment letters reflected their dedication and perseverance. He expressed confidence that the recruits would contribute to the state’s development through public service and administrative work.
The chief minister also highlighted the state government’s focus on transparent recruitment practices and merit-based selection processes. Referring to measures taken against irregularities in recruitment examinations, he said the implementation of Uttarakhand’s anti-cheating law had strengthened confidence in government hiring systems.
According to Dhami, nearly 33,000 youths have received government jobs in Uttarakhand over the past four-and-a-half years.
He further stated that the government has been working to strengthen key sectors such as irrigation and agriculture in line with broader national development priorities under Narendra Modi.
Discussing the state’s economic performance, the chief minister said Uttarakhand recorded a Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP) growth rate of 7.23 per cent. He added that per capita income in the state had increased by approximately 41 per cent over the last four years and noted that the state budget had crossed the ₹1 lakh crore mark.
Dhami also referred to a decline in unemployment rates and spoke about increasing reverse migration trends in hill regions, which he said reflected improving economic opportunities within the state.
Satpal Maharaj said the recruitment drive represented growing youth participation in the state’s development process. He noted that the irrigation department contributes not only to canal and water management projects but also to agricultural productivity, water conservation and the rural economy.
Meanwhile, Ganesh Joshi described the appointments as the beginning of a new professional journey for the selected candidates. He also highlighted emerging employment opportunities through startups, innovation and agriculture-linked initiatives in the state.
The School and Mass Education Department has introduced a major reform in vocational education by removing stream-based restrictions for Plus II students, allowing them to freely choose subjects and trade combinations across Arts, Science and Commerce streams.
Under the new policy, vocational students will no longer be bound by the traditional division of Humanities, Science or Commerce while selecting their Basic Foundation Course (BFC) subjects. The decision has been implemented under provisions of the Orissa Higher Secondary Education Act, 1982.
The reform means students enrolled in vocational trades can now opt for any BFC subjects of their choice, irrespective of the trade they pursue, subject to availability in their respective Higher Secondary Schools.
Officials from the Council of Higher Secondary Education said the move abolishes the earlier grouping system that restricted students to stream-specific subject combinations.
Previously, vocational students studying trades such as Poultry, Horticulture, Auditing and Accounting were required to select additional BFC subjects only from Science or Commerce streams, while students in Music trade were confined to Arts-related subjects.
With the latest notification, these limitations have been removed. A vocational student can now combine subjects from Arts, Science and Commerce according to individual interest and career goals.
Education officials said the decision assumes importance ahead of admissions for the 2026–27 academic session in Higher Secondary Schools across Odisha.
The reform aligns closely with the vision of the National Education Policy 2020, which promotes multidisciplinary learning, flexibility and student-centric education pathways. The policy framework encourages institutions to move away from rigid academic silos and enable learners to pursue diverse combinations of subjects and skills.
A senior CHSE official noted that earlier restrictions were largely linked to infrastructural limitations and resource constraints in schools. However, the government concluded that such limitations should not prevent students from studying subjects aligned with their interests and future aspirations.
Education experts believe the decision could significantly improve the attractiveness of vocational education by offering students greater academic freedom and reducing the long-standing perception that vocational streams provide limited learning choices.
The reform is also expected to support interdisciplinary learning and improve employability by allowing students to combine technical trade skills with subjects from other disciplines, creating broader academic and career opportunities.
Observers say Odisha’s move reflects a wider national shift towards more flexible and skill-oriented education models aimed at preparing students for evolving workforce demands and diverse career pathways.
The Indian Institute of Information Technology Nagpur has achieved a major milestone in campus placements, with its Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) branch recording 100 per cent placements for the 2024-25 academic session. The institute reported that the highest package offered to a CSE student stood at ₹60 lakh per annum, reflecting growing industry demand for skilled technology graduates.
According to official data released by the institute, the Electronics and Communication Engineering (ECE) branch also posted strong results with a placement rate of 97 per cent. The highest salary package offered to ECE students reached ₹42.26 lakh annually.
The institute further reported impressive average salary figures across both branches. While CSE students secured an average annual package of ₹15.41 lakh, ECE students received an average package of ₹14.19 lakh, indicating a significant improvement over previous academic years.
Established in 2015 with approval from the Union Ministry of Human Resource Development, IIIT-Nagpur initially functioned from the campus of Visvesvaraya National Institute of Technology before shifting to its permanent 100-acre campus at Waranga near Nagpur.
Data accessed through an RTI application filed by activist Sanjay Thul showed that during the 2023-24 academic session, placement rates stood at 91.09 per cent for CSE students and 89 per cent for ECE students. During that cycle, the highest package recorded was ₹47 lakh for CSE and ₹20 lakh for ECE students, highlighting sharp year-on-year growth in recruiter interest and salary offerings.
The ongoing 2025-26 placement season has also begun on a positive note. So far, 30.25 per cent of CSE students and 15.38 per cent of ECE students have already secured placements. The highest package offered in the current cycle has reached ₹32.6 lakh for CSE students, while ECE students have received offers up to ₹80 lakh per annum. Average salary for ECE students has also climbed to ₹19.11 lakh.
Apart from placements, the institute has expanded academically. For the 2025-26 session, 619 admissions were recorded against an approved intake of 648 seats. Faculty shortages have also reduced, with vacancies declining from 18 to eight. Additionally, the Board of Governors has approved 47 new teaching posts, pending final clearances from the Union Finance Department and the Ministry of Education.
Indian Institute of Technology Madras has opened applications for its BS programmes in Data Science and Applications and Electronic Systems without requiring JEE Main or JEE Advanced scores, creating an alternative pathway into IIT education for students across the country.
Applications for the programmes are currently open through the institute’s official portal until June 5, 2026. The initiative is being viewed as a significant step toward widening access to high-quality technical education beyond the traditional entrance examination system.
Unlike regular BTech admissions at IITs, entry into these BS programmes does not depend on competitive JEE rankings. Instead, eligible students must complete an online preparatory process followed by a qualifying examination.
The programmes are open to any Class 12 graduate from a recognised board. Additionally, Class 11 students can apply in advance and begin preparing early for the admission process. While the BS in Data Science and Applications is open to students from all academic streams with a basic mathematics background, the BS in Electronic Systems requires prior study of Physics and Mathematics.
The structure of the programmes has been designed in line with the principles of the National Education Policy 2020, offering multiple exit and re-entry options. Students can earn a foundation certificate after one year, a diploma after two years, a bachelor’s degree after three years, or continue to complete the full four-year BS degree, which also grants IIT Madras alumni status.
The flexible academic model is expected to benefit working professionals, students from remote regions and learners who may not have pursued conventional engineering entrance coaching.
Education experts believe the initiative could gradually reshape access to premier technical institutions in India by recognising diverse learning pathways and skill-based progression rather than relying solely on highly competitive entrance exams.
The move may also encourage other IITs and leading institutions to introduce similar non-JEE routes in emerging technology fields such as artificial intelligence, data science and electronics. At the same time, observers note that traditional JEE-based BTech admissions are likely to remain the dominant route for core engineering programmes.
With demand for digital and interdisciplinary skills rising rapidly, IIT Madras’ initiative reflects a broader shift toward flexible, technology-driven higher education models aimed at expanding participation and improving accessibility.
Amid growing anxiety and frustration among NEET-UG aspirants following the controversy surrounding the examination, Dadaji Bhuse urged students to remain patient and trust the ongoing investigation into the alleged paper leak case.
Speaking in Mumbai on May 25, the Maharashtra School Education Minister described the incident as “most unfortunate” and assured students that the Central Government was treating the matter with utmost seriousness.
“While it is undeniably the most unfortunate incident, the Central Government has intervened with the utmost seriousness. As we are aware, an inquiry into the matter is currently being conducted by the CBI,” Bhuse said.
He added that several individuals linked to the alleged irregularities had already been arrested and that the probe agency was carrying out a detailed investigation into the issue.
“Several individuals have already been incarcerated, and the CBI is conducting a thorough, in-depth investigation into the matter,” the minister stated.
Addressing lakhs of students preparing for medical admissions across the country, Bhuse made an emotional appeal asking aspirants not to lose hope amid uncertainty surrounding the examination process.
“I would like to make a humble appeal to all students: have faith that the arduous effort you have invested in your studies will ultimately receive the justice it deserves,” he said.
The remarks come at a time when concerns over transparency and fairness in national-level competitive examinations continue to dominate public discourse. The alleged NEET-UG paper leak controversy has sparked protests and demands for accountability from students, parents, and education activists across several states.
The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has been probing the matter after allegations surfaced regarding irregularities in the conduct of the examination. Authorities have maintained that action is being taken against those involved while efforts continue to safeguard the integrity of the examination system.
NEET-UG remains one of India’s largest entrance examinations, serving as the gateway for admission to undergraduate medical courses across government and private institutions.
The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI) is set to establish an advanced forensic auditing laboratory in Hyderabad to support small and medium chartered accountant firms in building forensic audit capabilities, IChttps://edinbox.com/index.php/news/sustainability/7556-government-moves-to-make-sustainable-education-central-to-employment-strategyAI President Prasanna Kumar D has said.
According to Kumar, the proposed facility will operate on a “pay and use” model and provide assignment-specific forensic auditing tools to practitioners who may not have access to expensive technologies independently.
Speaking in a recent interview to PTI, Kumar said many small and medium CA firms are currently unable to participate in large forensic audit assignments due to the lack of specialised infrastructure and technical expertise.
To address this gap, ICAI plans to launch the advanced forensic auditing lab at its Centre of Excellence (CoE) in Hyderabad within the next two to three months.
“Forensic audit is an emerging area, and many smaller firms do not have the necessary capabilities to undertake large assignments. The new lab will help bridge that gap,” Kumar said.
The initiative comes at a time when the accounting profession is undergoing rapid transformation with growing emphasis on forensic auditing, artificial intelligence, data analytics, ESG disclosures, and non-financial reporting.
ICAI, which has more than five lakh members across India, is also working to modernise its education and training framework in response to evolving industry requirements.
The institute recently constituted the Committee for Review of Education and Training (CRET), which is expected to recommend major curriculum updates in the coming months. The revised curriculum is likely to integrate emerging subjects such as AI, data analytics, and forensic auditing into chartered accountancy education.
Meanwhile, the institute has also introduced global networking guidelines aimed at enabling the creation of large home-grown accounting firms capable of competing with international players and collaborating with global networks.
Officials believe the new forensic auditing lab will not only strengthen the professional capabilities of smaller CA firms but also create better opportunities in India’s expanding financial and compliance ecosystem.
Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University (GGSIPU) has introduced seven new healthcare and allied medical science programmes for the 2026 academic session, expanding opportunities for students seeking careers in emerging healthcare sectors such as clinical psychology, trauma care, rehabilitation, epidemiology, and speech therapy.
The university has also opened the online admission process for these newly launched programmes. According to GGSIPU, interested candidates can apply through the university’s official admission portals, with the last date for submitting applications fixed as May 31, 2026.
The newly introduced courses include undergraduate, postgraduate, and specialised diploma programmes designed to address the growing demand for trained allied healthcare professionals across hospitals, rehabilitation centres, research organisations, and public health institutions.
New healthcare courses introduced by GGSIPU
The seven newly launched programmes are:
- BSc Clinical Psychology (Hons.)
- BSc Emergency Medical and Trauma Technology (EMTT)
- Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS) / Master in Applied Epidemiology
- MA Clinical Psychology
- Post Graduate Diploma in Rehabilitation Psychology (PGDRP)
- MSc Speech Language Pathology (SLP)
- Bachelor of Optometry
University officials said the programmes have been introduced in response to changing healthcare needs and the increasing importance of specialised non-traditional medical professions in India’s healthcare ecosystem.
The expansion comes at a time when sectors such as mental healthcare, emergency medical services, rehabilitation sciences, speech therapy, and epidemiological research are witnessing rapid growth following rising healthcare awareness and public health challenges.
Experts say the demand for allied healthcare professionals has increased significantly in recent years, especially after the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted shortages in areas such as trauma management, rehabilitation support, public health surveillance, and mental health services.
Courses such as clinical psychology and rehabilitation psychology are expected to attract students interested in mental healthcare and behavioural sciences, while programmes like EMTT and applied epidemiology may appeal to candidates looking to work in emergency response systems, disease surveillance, and healthcare administration.
Meanwhile, speech language pathology and optometry continue to emerge as important specialised healthcare fields with growing employment opportunities in hospitals, rehabilitation clinics, schools, and diagnostic centres.
GGSIPU has fixed the application fee at ₹2,500 per programme. Students applying for multiple courses will be required to pay the application fee separately for each course.
The university has advised applicants to carefully review eligibility criteria, admission guidelines, and programme details before completing the online registration process.
Education experts believe the introduction of such specialised programmes reflects the broader transformation of India’s healthcare education system, where demand is increasingly shifting toward multidisciplinary and allied healthcare professions alongside conventional medical degrees.
The University Grants Commission has asked universities and colleges offering law programmes to strengthen forensic-focused legal education in line with India’s new criminal law reforms under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS). The move is aimed at promoting a more scientific, evidence-based justice system and improving the quality of criminal investigations across the country.
In a letter dated May 12, the UGC directed law institutions to study the transformative impact of the new criminal justice framework and integrate forensic investigation components into teaching, research, and academic programmes. Institutions have also been asked to submit compliance reports detailing the steps taken for implementation.
The directive follows recommendations made during the 2025 Director Generals of Police and Inspector Generals of Police Conference, where senior officials called for greater reliance on forensic evidence, scientific investigation, and structured criminal case documentation for academic and training purposes.
India’s new criminal law framework — comprising the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS), and Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA) — seeks to modernise criminal justice by embedding forensic science more deeply into investigation and evidence collection processes.
Among the major reforms introduced under the BNSS is Section 176(3), which makes crime scene investigation by forensic experts mandatory in serious offences punishable with more than seven years of imprisonment. The BSA also strengthens the legal framework governing digital and electronic evidence, aligning India’s cybercrime investigation standards more closely with international practices.
Additionally, Section 349 of the BNSS allows investigating authorities to collect voice samples, fingerprints, and handwriting samples even before arrest in specific cases, expanding the scope of scientific evidence gathering.
Experts say the reforms could significantly increase demand for trained forensic professionals in India. According to P Madhava Soma Sundaram, India currently has only around 3,000 to 4,000 active forensic scientists against an estimated requirement of nearly 90,000 professionals.
“This gap can only be addressed if universities adopt structured, internship-oriented forensic education backed by qualified faculty and well-equipped laboratories,” Sundaram said. He also warned against poorly designed forensic programmes that could create “pseudo-experts” and weaken the justice system.
Amol Deshmukh described the reforms as a positive shift toward evidence-based justice, emphasising that forensic science and forensic medicine must work together in criminal investigations.
Meanwhile, Aditi Suresh Mane said law schools must now prepare students in areas such as cyber forensics, DNA jurisprudence, chain-of-custody protocols, and medico-legal documentation to improve investigative accuracy and conviction rates.
However, experts also cautioned that implementation challenges remain significant. Sonali Kusum noted that India continues to face shortages of forensic laboratories, trained personnel, and infrastructure, even as demand for forensic examinations rises in cases involving cybercrime, organised crime, and laws such as the POCSO Act.
Educationists believe the UGC’s push reflects a broader transformation in India’s legal education system, where future lawyers, investigators, and judicial professionals may increasingly require interdisciplinary training combining law, science, technology, and digital investigation skills.
As concerns grow over the recent hantavirus outbreak linked to the Antarctic cruise ship MV Hondius, United Kingdom authorities have reportedly secured emergency supplies of the experimental antiviral drug Favipiravir from Japan.
The drug may not be widely known to the public, but it gained global attention during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, when several countries explored it as a possible treatment option against the coronavirus.
What Is Favipiravir?
Favipiravir was originally developed by Toyama Chemical, now part of Fujifilm, and marketed under the brand name Avigan.
The drug was approved in Japan in 2014 for emergency use against new and emerging influenza strains. Unlike antibiotics, which target bacteria, Favipiravir works by interfering with the RNA polymerase enzyme that many RNA viruses rely on to reproduce. Because of this mechanism, scientists classify it as a broad-spectrum antiviral.
Researchers have studied the drug against several RNA viruses over the years, including influenza viruses, Ebola, and hantaviruses.
Its COVID-19 Connection
During the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic, countries including India, Russia and Japan experimented with Favipiravir as a treatment for mild and moderate COVID-19 cases.
The medication attracted attention largely because it was available in pill form, making it easier to administer outside hospitals compared to intravenous antivirals.
Initial small-scale studies suggested it might shorten recovery time or reduce viral replication. However, larger reviews and later studies produced inconsistent findings, with no strong evidence that the drug significantly reduced deaths or prevented severe disease progression in COVID-19 patients.
Although it never became a breakthrough COVID treatment, the drug remained on the radar of governments and health agencies for emergency outbreak situations.
Why Is Britain Importing It Now?
The current concern centres around the Andes hantavirus infection, a rare strain of hantavirus known for its unusual ability to spread between humans under certain circumstances.
According to reports, the UK Health Security Agency moved quickly to secure supplies of Favipiravir after fears emerged that infected individuals linked to the Antarctic cruise outbreak could develop severe illness.
At present, there is no officially approved antiviral treatment for hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, a severe respiratory disease associated with certain hantavirus strains. The condition can become life-threatening rapidly, with mortality rates for Andes virus infections estimated at around 35–40 percent in serious cases.
Animal studies and limited human reports have hinted that Favipiravir may offer some benefit against hantaviruses, though evidence remains limited and inconclusive.
For now, treatment for severe hantavirus infection still relies mainly on supportive care, including oxygen therapy, intensive monitoring, fluids and respiratory support.
Risks And Precautions
Despite the renewed interest, Favipiravir is not without risks. Studies have linked the drug to birth defects in animals, meaning it is generally avoided during pregnancy. Doctors must also monitor patients for potential side effects such as liver complications, elevated uric acid levels linked to gout, and gastrointestinal issues.
The drug is reportedly being considered under compassionate-use or experimental protocols rather than as a fully approved treatment.
A Post-Pandemic Reality
The rapid movement of antiviral stockpiles between countries also reflects how outbreak response strategies have changed since the COVID-19 pandemic. Governments are now more willing to deploy experimental treatments quickly while health agencies coordinate internationally during emerging health threats.
Health authorities, including the World Health Organization, continue to stress that the broader public risk from the current hantavirus situation remains very low, and experts say the outbreak does not resemble the global conditions that fueled COVID-19 transmission.
Still, the return of Favipiravir to headlines serves as a reminder of how quickly old outbreak tools can re-emerge when new health threats appear unexpectedly.
APG Shimla University, in collaboration with All India Forensic Science Entrance Test (AIFSET), organised a Forensic Science Immersive Experience Program aimed at providing students with practical exposure to forensic science and modern crime investigation systems. The initiative sought to help students make informed career decisions in the rapidly growing field of forensic science.
During the program, students were introduced to real-world forensic investigation procedures through live crime scene investigation simulations, evidence collection techniques, scientific documentation processes, forensic testing methods, and laboratory-based demonstrations. Participants also attended specialised academic sessions on cyber forensics, digital evidence analysis, toxicology, and modern investigative techniques.
The chief guest at the event, Mahesh Pathania, highlighted the growing importance of forensic science in ensuring impartial and accurate criminal investigations in the modern era.
He stated that advanced technologies such as DNA profiling, cyber forensics, fingerprint analysis, and digital evidence examination have significantly strengthened crime investigation systems, making them more effective and reliable.
Pathania further noted that scientific investigation methods have reinforced the justice system and that forensic experts now play a crucial role in law enforcement and judicial processes.
The program witnessed enthusiastic participation from students, forensic experts, faculty members, and media representatives. Journalist Parveen Mangta and Dainik Bhaskar representative Deepika were also present at the event.
Among the dignitaries attending the program were APG Shimla University Pro-Chancellor Ramesh Chauhan, Registrar R. L. Sharma, Dean Academics Anand Mohan, Dean Faculty Ashwini Sharma, and EdInbox AVP Vikas Dhaka.
The program concluded with practical demonstrations, academic discussions, and deliberations on emerging opportunities in the field of forensic science.
For many students after Class 12, biotechnology is one of the most misunderstood career options. Some believe it is only for future scientists, others assume it offers fewer opportunities than engineering or medicine. The reality is far more interesting.
Biotechnology blends biology with technology to handle real world issues in healthcare, farming, etc. And because industries are steadily putting more money into research, genetic technologies, bioinformatics and healthcare innovation, biotechnology graduates are now moving into roles that barely existed even a decade ago, and are building a lucrative career.
So, is biotechnology a good career in 2026? For many students, the answer is yes, but only if they actually understand what the field is about, not just what people say it is.
What Is Biotechnology?
Biotechnology is basically the use of biological science to build products, tools and solutions that improve human life, and also help protect the environment.
It blends subjects like:
- Biology
- Genetics
- Microbiology
- Biochemistry
- Molecular Biology
- Bioinformatics
- Data Analysis
Biotechnology professionals work with living organisms, cells, DNA and biological systems to develop new medicines, improve crops, create sustainable industrial processes and advance scientific research. In simple terms, biotechnology uses science to solve practical problems.
Why Is Biotechnology Becoming More Popular?
The world is facing challenges that require scientific solutions. From emerging diseases and food security concerns to environmental sustainability and personalised healthcare, biotechnology is increasingly becoming part of the answer.
The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the importance of biotechnology in vaccine development, diagnostics and healthcare innovation. Since then, investments in life sciences, biopharmaceuticals, genetic research and biotechnology startups have continued to grow globally. As a result, demand for skilled biotechnology professionals has expanded across both research and industry sectors.
What Can You Do After a Biotechnology Degree?
One of the biggest misconceptions about biotechnology is that graduates can only become researchers. In reality, career opportunities are far more diverse. Biotechnology graduates may work in:
Pharmaceutical Companies
Developing medicines, vaccines and therapeutic products.
Biotech Research Laboratories
Conducting research in genetics, molecular biology and biotechnology applications.
Healthcare and Diagnostics
Supporting diagnostic technologies, laboratory operations and healthcare innovation.
Agricultural Biotechnology
Improving crop productivity, disease resistance and sustainable farming practices.
Bioinformatics
Using computational tools and data analysis to study biological information.
Environmental Biotechnology
Developing solutions related to waste management, pollution control and environmental conservation.
Clinical Research
Supporting drug development and clinical trials.
Higher Education and Research
Pursuing postgraduate studies, doctoral research and academic careers.
What Is the Scope of Biotechnology in India?
India's biotechnology sector has grown significantly over the last decade. The country has developed a strong presence in Biopharmaceuticals, Vaccine manufacturing, Agricultural biotechnology, Bio-services, Medical diagnostics, and Research and development. Government initiatives supporting biotechnology innovation, startup ecosystems and scientific research have also contributed to sector growth.
As India continues investing in healthcare infrastructure, life sciences and scientific innovation, biotechnology is expected to remain an important contributor to future economic and technological development.
Biotechnology Salary: What Can Students Expect?
Salary in biotechnology depends on several factors:
- Qualification level
- Technical skills
- Industry sector
- Location
- Work experience
Fresh graduates typically begin with entry-level roles in laboratories, pharmaceutical companies, diagnostics firms or research organisations. Professionals who specialise in areas such as bioinformatics, clinical research, molecular biology or biotechnology research often see stronger career progression opportunities over time.
Students should focus on developing practical laboratory skills, internships and industry exposure rather than evaluating the field solely on starting salary figures.
Who Should Choose Biotechnology?
Biotechnology is suitable for students who:
- Enjoy biology and life sciences
- Are curious about how living systems work
- Like problem-solving and experimentation
- Have an interest in healthcare or research
- Want to contribute to scientific innovation
- Enjoy combining science with technology
Students seeking only quick financial returns may find other fields more attractive. Biotechnology often rewards long-term learning, specialisation and technical expertise.
Biotechnology After Class 12: What Are the Course Options?
Students can pursue several programmes after Class 12, including:
Undergraduate Courses
- B.Sc. Biotechnology
- B.Tech Biotechnology
- B.Sc. Biotechnology (Honours)
- Integrated Biotechnology Programmes
Postgraduate Courses
- M.Sc. Biotechnology
- M.Tech Biotechnology
- Specialised Life Science Programmes
- Research Degrees
Course structures vary between universities and institutions.
Is Biotechnology a Good Career for the Future?
Few industries sit at the intersection of healthcare, technology, sustainability and scientific innovation quite like biotechnology. Advances in genetic engineering, artificial intelligence-driven drug discovery, personalised medicine, synthetic biology and agricultural innovation are expected to create new opportunities over the coming decade. While biotechnology requires dedication and continuous learning, it remains one of the most future-oriented scientific careers available today.
What should Students Know?
Choosing a career is not about following trends. It is about understanding where your interests, strengths and long-term goals meet. Biotechnology may not always attract the same attention as medicine or engineering, but it quietly powers many of the scientific advances shaping modern life.
For students who are fascinated by biology, innovation and real-world problem-solving, biotechnology offers something rare: the opportunity to contribute to discoveries that can improve lives, industries and society itself.
AIFSET, also known as All India Forensic Science Entrance Test, is the best online entrance test for students seeking to pursue forensic science. It is an exclusively designed exam that tests a student’s skill, knowledge, critical thinking, and caliber.
In today’s era where crimes are peaking,it’s crucial for any country to have highly-skilled forensic experts who can serve justice. Simple findings like a fingerprint, DNA, hair strand and a broken nail, can change the course of any case in the courtroom. Behind these discoveries are those forensic experts.
In this article, we will take a closer look at which forensic science entrance test is the best to take for pursuing this course.
AIFSET: Entrance Test For Forensic Science
AIFSET 2026 is a national-level online entrance test conducted by Edinbox. It is designed for students who wish to pursue UG or PG programmes in forensic science through top participating universities across the country.
Unlike other admission processes where students are required to apply separately to different institutes using the entrance test score, AIFSET offers a platform that simplifies the admission as well as support throughout the process.
For students living in rural areas, tier 2 and tier 3 cities, it is always a big challenge to travel from one place to another for an exam. This drains them till the time they reach the centre, and this sometimes leads to students not performing well in the exam. This is why online entrance tests are a better option. Students from different regions can take the exam without feeling exhausted.
Why Are Students Choosing AIFSET?
The growing importance of scientific investigation is one of the main reasons students are choosing AIFSET. Today, forensic science plays a critical role in solving crimes, investigating cyberattacks, analysing digital evidence, detecting financial fraud and examining biological evidence. As law enforcement agencies, forensic laboratories and cybercrime units increasingly rely on scientific methods, the demand for trained forensic professionals continues to rise.
Students who are curious, analytical and interested in applying science to real-world challenges often find forensic science an exciting career path. AIFSET provides a dedicated and accessible admission route for such students, helping them take the first step towards a profession built on evidence, investigation and scientific discovery.
Forensic Science is Becoming a Popular Career Option
Today, graduates in forensic science can look into opportunities like:
- Crime Scene Investigation
- Cyber Forensics
- Digital Forensics
- Forensic Biology
- DNA Analysis
- Toxicology
- Questioned Document Examination
- Research Laboratories
- Government Forensic Departments
- Private Investigation and Security Sectors
This growing career scope has made a lot of students see forensic science as a long-term profession, rather than only a trending career.
What makes AIFSET stand out compared to other admission routes?
A major strength of AIFSET is its specialised focus. While other entrance examinations usually cover several disciplines, AIFSET is designed only for students who are really interested in studying forensic science. Because of this, it becomes one of those rare admission pathways that lead students to the right career path. Here are some features of AIFSET that makes it the right choice:
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Online Exam Convenience
These days, a lot of students prefer admission processes that are more flexible and easier to access.
Since AIFSET is conducted online, candidates can take part without going on long trips to different examination centres. The digital setup makes the application and exam steps simpler, and it helps students from across India join in without too much hassle.
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One Exam, 180+ University Choices
After Class 12, the hardest part for many students is picking the right university. AIFSET helps here by bringing candidates to top participating universities that offer forensic science programmes. Instead of dealing with separate admissions, students can look into multiple options through a single examination process.
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Scholarship Opportunities (if eligible)
As per the AIFSET guidelines, eligible students may get scholarship benefits provided by participating institutions. For many families, financial support matters a lot when deciding on higher education. So scholarships become an extra plus, yes also, within the admission journey.
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Free Career Consultation
Many students have no idea which course to choose, which college to select, and what to become. This is where career counselling becomes important. Im the era where a student can just chatgpt all the questions, a human touch becomes vital for finding the right direction.
AIFSET offers free career counselling to all the students interested in forensic science or who are still not sure what they want to do in the future. This feature makes AIFSET stand out.
Courses Available Through AIFSET
Students qualifying through AIFSET can look into admission pathways in forensic science programmes such as
Undergraduate Programmes
- B.Sc. Forensic Science
- B.Sc Cyber Forensic
- B.Sc. Forensic Science & Criminology
- B.Sc. Cyber Security
Postgraduate Programmes
(note: Programme availability might differ depending on the participating university)
Who Can Apply for AIFSET 2026?
Students who have already completed their schooling or are currently appearing for their Class 12 examinations from a recognised board can apply for undergraduate admissions through AIFSET.
For postgraduate programmes, candidates are typically expected to hold a relevant bachelor’s degree from a recognised institution with a minimum aggregate of 50%.
How to Register for AIFSET 2026?
- Register: Go to the official portal and enrol for AIFSET 2026
- Exam fee: Pay 2000rs entrance exam fee (no hidden chargers)
- Exam: Take the exam using your phone, pc, or laptop.
- Result: View the result on the official website and download it
- Counseling: Enrol for a counselling session and choose the desired university
- Admission: Complete the provisional admission process and reserve your seat.
What Should Forensic Science Aspirants Know?
With the need for forensic professionals continuing to rise, students also need admission routes that are focused enough, easy to access, and aligned with the discipline they want to study. Not something random.
So if your question is basically, what’s the best online entrance exam for forensic science in 2026, AIFSET gives you a dedicated path into one of the most interesting careers out there today.
Not every student dreams of becoming an engineer, doctor or civil servant. Some notice how a restaurant feels more welcoming than another. Some wonder why one office encourages collaboration while another feels exhausting. Others spend hours redesigning rooms, sketching layouts or saving interior ideas online without realising that these interests can become a profession.
For such students, interior design is no longer an unconventional career choice. It is becoming one of the most practical creative professions in India.
Driven by growth in housing, hospitality, retail, commercial real estate and premium lifestyle sectors, the profession is expanding well beyond traditional home décor. At the same time, design education is becoming more structured, making it easier for students to enter the field through dedicated entrance examinations such as the All India Design Aptitude Test (AIDAT).
Here are five reasons why interior design deserves serious consideration in 2026.
Interior Design Is About Solving Problems, Not Decorating Rooms
The popular image of an interior designer choosing paint colours and furniture tells only a small part of the story. In reality, interior designers solve spatial problems. They determine how people move through a space, how natural light is utilised, how storage is integrated, how accessibility is maintained and how functionality can coexist with aesthetics.
Whether designing a hospital waiting area, a co-working office, a classroom or a compact urban apartment, the objective remains the same: create spaces that work better for the people using them. This practical dimension is one reason the profession continues to attract students who enjoy both creativity and analytical thinking.
Demand Is Coming From Multiple Industries
One of the strongest indicators of career stability is industry diversity. Interior designers are no longer limited to residential projects. Today, opportunities exist across architecture firms, real estate companies, hospitality groups, retail brands, furniture manufacturers, exhibition design agencies and workplace consulting firms.
The rapid growth of organised retail, premium housing projects, flexible office spaces and experiential hospitality has increased demand for professionals who understand user-centred design. Many graduates also pursue independent practice, allowing them to build their own client base and creative identity over time.
Technology Has Changed the Profession
Students entering interior design today will work in a very different environment from designers who started their careers twenty years ago. Three-dimensional modelling software, virtual walkthroughs, digital rendering platforms and AI-assisted visualisation tools are increasingly becoming part of everyday design workflows. Clients often expect to see realistic representations of a project long before construction begins.
As a result, modern design education combines traditional design principles with digital skills, preparing graduates for a profession where creativity and technology operate together rather than separately.
Design Careers Offer Visible Impact
Many professions contribute to society in important ways, but their outcomes are not always immediately visible, but interior design is different as its impact is visible.
A well-designed classroom can improve concentration. A thoughtfully planned healthcare environment can reduce stress. A workplace can support productivity simply through better spatial organisation. This ability to shape everyday experiences is one of the profession's most rewarding aspects.
AIDAT Creates a Structured Entry Route Into Design Education
The biggest challenge for many aspiring designers is not talent. It is understanding where to begin. The All India Design Aptitude Test (AIDAT) provides a national-level admission pathway for students interested in design programmes. Through the platform, candidates can explore opportunities across 100+ design colleges and more than 300 design courses offered by participating institutions.
The examination is conducted online and includes an aptitude-based assessment, followed by portfolio evaluation, counselling support and interview stages for shortlisted candidates. Students can also access career guidance and counselling resources while exploring different design specialisations.
For students uncertain about which institution or design discipline to choose, this structured process can simplify decision-making significantly.
What Should Aspirants Note
Interior design sits at a unique intersection of creativity, technology, business and human behaviour. It offers opportunities to solve practical problems, influence how people experience spaces and build a career across a wide range of industries.
For students who enjoy creative thinking but also want a profession with tangible outcomes and growing demand, interior design remains one of the most promising options after Class 12. The profession begins long before the first project is designed. It begins with choosing the right educational pathway.
For many aspiring designers in 2026, that journey may start with AIDAT. But career confusion can become a hurdle. So, connect team AIDAT for free career consultation today @ 08035018542.
Whether you aspire to be a journalist, news anchor, content creator, filmmaker, radio jockey, public relations professional, or a digital media expert, GMCET 2026 might be the stepping stone to some of the top media universities in India.
GMCET (Global Media Common Entrance Test) is a national level media entrance exam for students who wish to pursue journalism, mass communication, media studies, film, animation and related courses. The exam is organized by the Global Media Education Council (GMEC) and powered by Edinbox.
Why Is GMCET Important?
Students can take one exam and explore admission opportunities in 50+ participating universities and institutions, rather than applying to multiple colleges. The test assesses communication skills, logical reasoning, analytical ability and aptitude for media related careers.
Courses Offered by GMCET
Students can apply for programmes such as:
- BJMC (Bachelor of Journalism and Mass Communication)
- BA Journalism and Mass Communication
- BMS (Bachelor of Media Studies)
- Bachelor of Mass Communication (BMC)
- BMM (Bachelor of Mass Media)
- B.Sc Animation & Graphics
- B.Sc Film & Television
- B.Sc Media Technologies
- B.Sc VFX Film Making
- B.Sc Visual Communication
- MJMC and MAJMC programmes
Eligibility Criteria
The candidates should have passed or be appearing for Class 12 (10+2) with 50% marks for General category and 45% marks for SC/ST/OBC category candidates. Recognised institutions may also be able to offer diplomas.
Career Opportunities After GMCET
Careers that a media degree can lead to include:
- Journalist
- TV Correspondent
- News Analyst
- Radio Jockey (RJ)
- Video Jockey (VJ)
- Public Relations Officer
- Photojournalist
- Content Writer
- Feature Writer
- Media Producer
Additional Benefits of GMCET
Students can also get career counselling, internship, education loan assistance and placement support from the participating institutions and GMEC network.
GMCET 2026 provides a one-stop solution for students aspiring to pursue careers in journalism, broadcasting, filmmaking, digital media, and content creation, offering a single entrance exam for multiple media education streams.
Artificial intelligence has transformed the working of the world, but what has dramatically changed is software development. Building an application was a lot more complex a few years ago, requiring a lot of programming expertise, a knowledge of frameworks, and thousands of lines of code to be written manually. With AI tools, you can create websites, mobile apps, databases, and automation workflows with just a written or verbal prompt.
With this change, two new terms are becoming more popular in the tech world: Vibe Coder and Agentic Coder. These concepts can be encountered by students who are interested in computer science, AI, software development, data science, or any other emerging technology, but they may not know what these concepts are. Are they job roles? Do they constitute coding techniques? Which one has more career prospects? Which courses are needed to go into these professions?
The solutions are found in comprehending the impact of AI on the software developer career and the possibilities it opens for developing digital products.
Who is a Vibe Coder?
A vibe coder is a person who utilizes artificial intelligence resources to produce software, with the help of natural language instructions and not by writing all the code by hand. The developer does not actually construct an application from scratch but rather spells out what they desire to have. Then, the AI generates much of the code.
A user could, for instance, direct an AI assistant: "Build a student attendance management system with login authentication, attendance reports, and a dashboard."
Much of the code, structure of the interface, and logic are generated by the AI, making the work faster. The human coder then checks the output and makes necessary changes, tests the function, and then goes back to adding more prompts to further improve the app.
The focus is on creativity, experimentation and speed. A vibe coder is more concerned about articulating the concepts and less about the syntax.
This is one of the methods that is gaining popularity among the start-up founders, product designers, entrepreneurs, students, and professionals who wish to build software in the shortest possible time without spending months in learning advanced programming frameworks.
Who is an Agentic Coder?
The agentic coder collaborates with AI in a sophisticated and formalized way. An agentic coder would not ask AI to write individual pieces of code but rely on AI agents that can plan, code, test, debug, and optimize software systems at various stages of development.
Instead of saying: "Create a login page." An agentic coder may instruct the AI: "Build a complete university admission portal with registration, document upload, payment integration, dashboards, analytics, testing, and deployment support."
The AI agent then decomposes the project into tasks, creates components, verifies the output, detects any mistakes, and keeps moving forward towards the goal. The human remains the one who is in charge of supervision, decision making and quality control, while the AI follows a significant part of the process.
Basically, a vibe coder is someone who completes a project with the help of AI, while an Agentic coder is someone who lets AI complete the objective directly.
Vibe Coder vs Agentic Coder: Key Differences
Although both approaches use artificial intelligence, their working styles are significantly different.
|
Feature |
Vibe Coder |
Agentic Coder |
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Primary Focus |
Rapid creation and experimentation |
Goal-driven software development |
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Human Role |
Idea creator and prompt writer |
Planner, strategist, and supervisor |
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AI Responsibility |
Generates code based on instructions |
Plans, codes, tests, debugs, and improves |
|
Technical Knowledge Required |
Basic to moderate |
Moderate to advanced |
|
Best Use Case |
Prototypes, MVPs, personal projects |
Enterprise software and large systems |
|
Development Style |
Prompt-based |
Workflow-based |
|
Speed |
Fast initial development |
Faster end-to-end execution |
Why These Roles Matter in the Future
As AI becomes a more integral part of the workforce, tech firms are seeking individuals who can collaborate with it efficiently. The software industry is shifting from tedious coding to more complex roles like problem-solving, system design, product strategy, user experience planning, and AI orchestration.
With increasing capabilities of AI, organisations require professionals who can:
- Define business requirements
- Effective guidance of AI Systems
- Evaluate generated outputs
- Recognize mistakes and hazards
- Design scalable solutions
- Manage AI-assisted workflows
As a result, new skillsets are emerging that combine historical programming expertise with an understanding of AI.
Career Scope for Vibe Coders
With the advent of AI development platforms, there are opportunities available for people who can quickly convert ideas into functional products.
Typical career options are:
- Product Developer: Creating websites, apps, and digital products with AI-powered development tools.
- Startup Founder: Rapid development and testing of business ideas without large development teams.
- No-Code and Low-Code Specialist: Creating business solutions using AI driven automation platforms.
- Digital Product Consultant: Assisting organisations in the creation of tools and workflows with the use of modern technologies from the realm of artificial intelligence.
- Freelance App Builder: Creating applications for clients with the help of AI coding assistants and quick development methods.
With the need for faster innovation cycles, professionals who can easily turn ideas into prototypes are becoming more valuable to businesses.
Career Scope for Agentic Coders
Agentic coding is likely to be a very important coding technique in the future software engineering.
Career options:
- AI Software Engineer: Creating and operating systems with independent AI agents.
- AI Solutions Architect: Creating advanced enterprise systems with AI capabilities.
- Machine Learning Engineer: Creating AI models and intelligent software solutions.
- AI Product Manager: Drive AI product development initiatives.
- Automation Engineer: Developing independent workflows to execute business processes with little or no manual effort.
- Intelligent Systems Developer: Development of Application that can make decisions, reason and behave adaptively.
The need for agents is likely to increase dramatically as organisations implement agent-based systems into health care, finance, education, manufacturing and e-commerce.
Skills AI coders Must Have
While pursuing either of the two fields, students should build solid bases and not solely depend on AI tools.
Important skills include:
- Programming fundamentals
- Data structures and algorithms.
- Python programming
- Database management
- Web development
- Software engineering principles
- Artificial intelligence concepts
- Machine learning basics
- Cloud computing
- Cybersecurity awareness
- Prompt engineering
- Critical thinking and problem-solving skills.
Apart from these, communication skills also are crucial as future developers will have to spend more time setting goals and working with AI systems.
What Courses are Available for Students to Take?
There are several undergraduate programmes that students can follow if they wish to become vibe coders or agentic coders.
Popular options include:
- B.Tech Computer Science Engineering.
- B.Technology, Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning.
- B.Tech Data Science
- B.Tech Information Technology
- BCA is a Bachelor's degree in Computer Applications.
- B.Sc Computer Science
- B.Sc Artificial Intelligence
- B.Sc Data Science
- B.Sc Cyber Security
- Integrated Computer Science Programmes
These courses will offer the technical background needed for engaging with new AI technologies. The aptitude test for admission to AI and Technology Course.
Which Entrance Exam Should One Take?
There are several national and state level entrance exams through which students can get admission in top universities. The most popular ones are:
- JEE Main: Recognized by NITs, IIITs and other engineering institutes in India.
- JEE Advanced: Essential for getting admission into Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs).
- CUET UG: Used by many central and participating universities offering computer science and technology programmes.
- GCSET: Global Computer Science Entrance Test is becoming popular for its convenient and online entrance test format for seamless admission into 100+ top universities offering relevant courses.
State Engineering Entrance Exams
- MHT CET
- WBJEE
- KCET
- AP EAMCET
- TS EAMCET
- University-Specific Entrance Exams
Entrance Test for Engineering and Computer Science admissions in many private universities are held by themselves.
Students should check eligibility requirements and admission criteria of their preferred institutions before applying.
What Career Path to Take?
The question isn't whether or not students should be vibe coders or agentic coders. The real question is whether they have the depth of understanding of technology needed to leverage AI effectively.
Vibe coding is an easy way to get into software development and product creation. Agentic coding is a more advanced type of AI coding that lets it perform more complex tasks with human oversight.
Future technology professionals will probably use both methods in practice. They can experiment, prototype and test ideas rapidly using vibe coding. They might use agentic systems for larger applications, enterprise platforms or intelligent automation projects.
What Should Aspirants Know?
The advent of vibe coding, and even more so, agentic coding, is part of a wider shift in the technology sector. The software development process isn't just about coding by hand anymore. Effective problem solving, clear goal setting, and steering AI systems towards valuable results are becoming increasingly essential for success.
This transition opens up promising avenues for students looking into career paths related to artificial intelligence, software development, data science, or new technologies. The ability to use computer science concepts, understand AI concepts, solve problems, and work with tools to build things will always be useful regardless of the future of development tools.
It might not be the code that wins in the future, but it will be the intelligent use of AI to create solutions that address real-world problems. So, if you think you can do that, take the first step today. Feel free to connect at 9124572780 for free career counselling.
The National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET) has long been a symbol of India's most uniform and transparent path to medical studies. Millions of students took the pressure to crack it because they felt that the system was fair with one exam, one ranking and a single merit-based opportunity. But that trust has weakened sharply over the last two years.
NEET has fallen into a credibility crisis, from allegations of paper leakage to grace marks, from the functioning of the National Testing Agency (NTA) to repeated questions. Students are more concerned about the trustworthiness of the exam system than the competition or cut-offs.
What has made the situation worse is that this controversy comes barely two years after the NEET 2024 row, which had already raised questions about the credibility of the National Testing Agency (NTA). This time, however, the damage appears deeper because the exam itself had to be cancelled.
What Happened in NEET 2026?
NEET-UG 2026 was conducted on May 3 for nearly 23 lakh students. Soon after the exam, allegations surfaced regarding handwritten “guess papers” that reportedly contained questions similar to those asked in the actual paper.
Investigations later expanded across multiple states, including Bihar, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, and Haryana. Reports linked the controversy to alleged leak networks, digital circulation through messaging apps, and suspected coaching connections. As the issue escalated, the National Testing Agency (NTA) cancelled the examination and announced a re-test for June 21.
For lakhs of students, the decision was emotionally exhausting. Many had already spent years preparing under intense pressure. The cancellation pushed them back into uncertainty and anxiety.
Why Students Are Losing Trust
The biggest problem is no longer just the paper leak itself. It is the fear that the system is becoming unreliable. Competitive exams survive on credibility. Students can handle difficult papers and high cut-offs if they believe the process is fair. But repeated controversies have weakened confidence in the system.
Conversations around NEET have changed sharply over the past two years. Earlier, students discussed preparation strategies and ranks. Today, discussions revolve around paper leaks, exam cancellations, legal cases, and trust in the NTA. That shift reflects a deeper crisis.
The Pressure of India’s Single-Exam System
NEET has also exposed the risks of depending on one high-stakes exam for medical admissions across the country.
Every year, lakhs of families invest heavily in coaching, hostel fees, mock tests, and study material. Cities like Kota, Hyderabad, and Delhi have built entire coaching industries around NEET preparation.
When an exam of this scale faces allegations of irregularities, the emotional and financial impact becomes massive. The controversy has also revived concerns around student mental health, burnout, and the growing pressure created by India’s coaching culture.
The NTA’s Credibility Is Under Scrutiny
The National Testing Agency was created to improve transparency and standardisation in entrance exams. However, repeated controversies, from NEET 2024 to NEET 2026, have raised serious questions about institutional accountability. Parliamentary discussions, court scrutiny, and ongoing investigations have now turned the issue into a national debate on examination reform.
For many students, the issue is no longer about one leaked paper. It is about whether the system can still guarantee fairness.
Can NEET Regain Public Trust?
NEET still remains India’s biggest medical entrance exam. But rebuilding public confidence will take time. Students and parents now expect stronger security systems, transparent investigations, stricter accountability, and meaningful reforms rather than assurances alone. Because once students begin questioning the fairness of the system itself, the crisis becomes bigger than just an examination; it becomes a crisis of trust.
If you are someone who aspires to a career in medicine, there are many national-level entrance tests that can help you gain admission into top universities with a decent scholarship. Do your research and make your future. Don’t think NEET is the only path; your skill and determination is the real key to success.
New research warns that viral myths and fake news pose a critical danger to global safety efforts.
Boslough at Asteroid Day in Luxembourg. (Cover Image Source: University of New Mexico)
Raising alarm about the rapid spread of misinformation and disinformation on digital platforms, a team of researchers led by astrophysicist Mark Boslough from the University of New Mexico recently published a comprehensive review examining the current media landscape, which comprises multiple actors, including legacy media, influencers, AI, etc. According to the scientists, although the use of the internet and digital platforms has made it easier to access information, it has also allowed the rise of channels through which AI slop, internet clickbait, and sensationalized stories overflow.

A part of the Quick report prepared by NASA on 13 May 2024 (Representative Image Source- NASA)
On May 13, 2024, a quick look report was prepared by NASA on "planetary defense exercise" as a preventive measure. This was a drill for preparedness that takes place biennially to check the readiness of scientists and government agencies in case they had to respond to a fictional asteroid threat scenario. The exercise was not based on any real asteroid that was predicted to strike our planet. But bits and pieces of information from the simulation quickly turned into sensationalized online claims that were spread through X, Facebook, Reddit and other platforms. Apart from factual errors, the post's viral post implied that NASA had given a frightening alert about the 88-foot asteroid that might collide with Earth. This eventually led to mass panic, misunderstandings, and the spreading of rumors about Earth's possible end. On June 20, 2024, NASA clarified that there are currently no known significant asteroid threats to Earth in the foreseeable future, stressing that the widely shared impact claim was false and unrelated to any real-world danger.
Even though NASA made a public statement that there are 'no known significant asteroid threats,' it was too late for the false story that had already been exposed to a huge number of people. For Boslough and his co-authors, this incident is an illustration of how modern digital ecosystems can very rapidly alter scientific information before the experts have an opportunity to clarify or make corrections. The authors of this paper also pointed out that open access publishing, poorly reviewed content, influencers, etc. are some of the factors that have contributed to the situation in which lies can be circulated worldwide in a matter of hours.
The article discusses the different ways of misinformation that can come about and even continue. In fact, some rumors tend to spread rapidly during newscasts that are still unfolding. The authors highlighted the cases of false reports of an asteroid hitting the Earth as well as pseudoscientific hypotheses that propose such things as alien spacecraft orbits being interstellar objects or comet attacks annihilating ancient civilizations. Researchers cautioned that communication itself has become an element of planetary defense. Boslough will likely be presenting at the Geological Society of America meeting in Albuquerque about the research and its importance in communicating planetary defense.
Indian youth are going viral on social media calling themselves "a cockroach" while supporting the Cockroach Janata Party. India never imagined that the word “cockroach” would become a youth movement.
But in a matter of days, after a widely circulated and much debated interpretation of remarks attributed to the Chief Justice of India, social media was abuzz with youngsters who were calling themselves just that. Initially, the internet had it as another silly meme. After that, the numbers were too big to ignore.
The digital community, dubbed the “Cockroach Janata Party,” reportedly reached over 40,000 active members and nearly 80,000 sign-ups in just three days. Instagram pages were suddenly created.Instagram pages were suddenly created. Telegram groups multiplied. Memes travel faster than explanations ever could.
However, there was a sad sincerity to the satire. Young Indians were not celebrating cockroaches. They were talking about the modern survival experience.
The Internet has finally given a name to Emotional Exhaustion
A cockroach is just a tiny creature trying to survive… Poison, heat, hunger, neglect, it still lives in a place no one should be forced to live. Hence the metaphor struck a chord and the literate youth of India came up bold revealing truth, showing reality, discussing necessary topics, and using humor to convey without offending.
For years, students and young professionals have been living under a pressure system that doesn't stop long enough to consider whether they are emotionally coping or not. Competitive exams start early. Expectations come even sooner. Many young people are exhausted by the time they reach the end of university, and they look older than they are.
This generation learns and lives in fear of joblessness. Works while being afraid of being replaced. Sleeps with a fear of time slipping away. Even when resting, they feel guilty that someone else is going faster online. And so the jokes began.
Gradually, it transformed, the internet is flooding with it. People are commenting, sharing their miseries and supporting the CJP. One of the relatable comments said: “Still alive after 5 entrance exams and 3 panic attacks. Certified cockroach.” The sentence is fun, but between the lines is the pain Genz is holding.
The ‘Cockroach Janata Party’ Is Not About Politics
The ‘Cockroach Janata Party’ is not a real political party, it was a satirical comment that became viral. At first, the name felt absurd and people started sharing it for fun. However, in a matter of days the “Cockroach Janata Party” became a sign of something more than just internet humour, psychologically. Youth are reclaiming an insult and making it into a collective identity. And that act has power!
Users started using the term “cockroaches” on social media, not in a sense of pride, but in the sense that they are stuck in survival mode. The symbol represents a generation that is constantly adapting, but is not emotionally rewarded for it.
Students took the opportunity to discuss the pressure of exams. Young workers associated it with unhealthy work environments and burnout. Others talked about job cuts, inconsistent pay, coaching culture, poor job interviews, increasing living expenses, and the fatigue of constant competition with no guarantee of security. It was spread because it brought together people who felt isolated in the same struggle.
Young India Is Tired in a Way Older Systems Do Not Fully Understand
Indian youth life is a lonely life in particular. It's hard to explain, because, on the surface, everything seems ambitious and productive.
Growth, startups, innovation and the quest to become a global powerhouse are the topics that are on everyone's lips in the country. Social media is a place where hustle is rewarded:
- LinkedIn rewards achievement
- Families reward stability
- Coaching industries pay for ranks
But WHO pays for emotional survival?
The young Indians of today are juggling several timelines in their minds. They need to get good grades fast, make money early, be tech-savvy, be mentally tough, support their families, keep their relationships, develop careers, constantly learn new things, and somehow be grateful all the way.
Fear has become a way of life:
- Concern about test failure.
- Parents' expectations.
- Worry about being financially irrelevant.
- The worry of not having a home.
- Fear of missing out
- Worry about falling behind friends who are “settled”.
Even happiness is now programmed against productivity! That's why so many young people saw themselves in the cockroach metaphor. It was a sign of strength, not weakness, but of constant adaptation in the face of pressure.
Gen Z Uses Humour the Way Previous Generations Used Protest
The older generation sometimes voiced their discontent in speeches, rallies or organised movements. Collective anxiety is handled differently by Gen Z. It translates pain into internet language first.
Emotional shorthand is the reason why memes have become so commonplace; it's easier to be vulnerable directly than it is online. Irony is a distancing from pain, but also a public exposure of pain. That's exactly what happened here.
The “Cockroach Generation” trend went viral because it managed to make emotional exhaustion visible in a non-dramatic way. Beneath the jocularity there were serious discussions about:
- student suicides
- exam pressure
- unemployment
- burnout
- unstable careers
- declining mental health
- social comparison
- economic insecurity
This was not only meme culture, nope, not at all. It was emotional information! For the first time in years, Indian youth discovered a language that was more truthful about survival than motivational culture.
Universities Cannot Ignore This Emotional Shift Anymore
There is one uncomfortable truth that lies under this moment: many students don't feel emotionally safe in the systems that are supposed to prepare them for life.
Universities talk a lot about placements, rankings and academic performance. Much less attention is given to emotional resilience, career confusion, identity anxiety, or psychological burnout. However, these issues are increasingly influencing student life on campuses.
There is no need for grand speeches about youth empowerment at this time of institutions. They require hands-on empathy. Edinbox has already started to ‘Be The Change’ in order to bring the change, but that’s not enough. All the universities, teachers, professors, policymakers as well as ministers must start the ground level changes.
Students require accessible counselling support, realistic career guidance, healthier academic pressure systems,,conversations around failure and uncertainty, industry exposure before graduation, and an environment where asking for help is not treated as weakness.
A generation raised inside constant competition cannot continue surviving only on motivational slogans. Indian Youth have had enough push but direction? support? That’s what they actually need. Young people are not machines that can be made to run forever. After a while, emotional fatigue turns into educational fatigue.
Policymakers Need to Understand That Anxiety Is Becoming Structural
The frustration of the youth is not just a product of one problem in India. It is emerging from the instability that has built up in the education, employment and social expectation systems.
The competitive exams become tougher every year. The delays in recruitment are still continuing for the aspirants. Starting wages frequently don't keep up with the cost of living in the city. In the meantime, digital culture is continually amplifying comparison and pressure. The result is mental fatigue on a massive scale.
The discussion of youth development policy often centers on skills, innovation and employability, which are all relevant fields. Emotional wellbeing is often not given the same priority. For too many students and young workers, mental health support is not available, particularly in non-metropolitan settings.
The “Cockroach Generation” trend isn't just a reaction to the internet. It is a warning message that is coming out through humour because traditional language is no longer adequate. And to be brutally honest, if a whole generation starts thinking about survival instead of aspirations, there is something going on in the social sphere.
The Most Disturbing Part Is How Normal This Exhaustion Has Become
The worst thing about this trend is not the rage, it is the normality. There are too many young Indians who have already come to believe that exhaustion is a part of adulthood; anxiety is treated as ambition, burnout is mistaken for discipline, emotional numbness is sold as maturity. But people keep moving because they think it's unsafe to stop.
That's why the cockroach became a strong symbol on the internet. It caught a generation that cannot be killed, but seldom gave them a chance to sleep. Young people are surviving all that is thrown at them, but survival is becoming an empty victory.
In between the memes, the sarcasm and the dark humour, Indian youth admitted something it has been hiding for years. It's fed up with pretending everything is okay. They aren’t supporting any party, to be specific, they are raising awareness.
As literate citizens, it is our duty to read between the lines and not let any propaganda or misinformation sway the way of change that this cockroach generation has started. And it is worth noting that perhaps the most unsettling part of this entire episode is that an entire generation had to compare itself to a creature known only for survival before society finally stopped and listened.
Contemporary leadership education is quietly reshaping classrooms, and not everyone is comfortable with it. Some are appreciating the move while some are expressing concerns about manipulation and perspective shifts. What began as a few case studies in business schools is now becoming part of mainstream academic design by making its place in the syllabus.
Institutions are pushing forward with the leadership curriculum 2026, and a deeper question is emerging: Should contemporary leadership be taught in classrooms, or are we stepping into territory that education was never meant to occupy?
This is now no longer a discussion to have during a tea break especially after the recent big move by a university in Gujarat that has mandated a module on one living leader. This has triggered conversations across academic circles about neutrality, influence, and the purpose of higher education. It’s time to understand and openly talk about how universities define relevance, responsibility, and the future of learning.
Why Contemporary Leadership Has Entered the Curriculum
The rise of contemporary leadership education reflects a simple reality. Students are already observing leadership every day. They see it in startups, in public life, in digital spaces, and in the way influence operates around them. The classroom has only just begun to catch up but to bring it in the syllabus, and this shift is visible in 2026.
Courses are moving beyond fixed theories and are introducing a modern leadership syllabus that studies real decisions made in real time. Students are asked to analyse leaders who are still active, whose outcomes are still unfolding.
In contemporary leadership classrooms India, this change feels even more urgent. The pace of economic and entrepreneurial growth has created a demand for graduates who can think, adapt, and lead under uncertainty. This is closely tied to broader university curriculum trends 2026, where relevance is no longer optional. At its best, this approach bridges the gap between what students learn and what they will face.
Learning Becomes Thinking
The strongest case for contemporary leadership education lies in what it does to the way students think. It changes the role of education from delivering information to shaping judgment.
Within higher education pedagogy, this is a significant shift. When institutions focus on teaching leadership skills, they are not teaching students to follow leaders. They are asking them to question decisions, weigh consequences, and understand complexity.
This strengthens the critical thinking curriculum in a way that traditional methods rarely achieve. Students begin to ask better questions. They learn to sit with uncertainty instead of searching for quick answers.
For those exploring leadership skills after 12th, this becomes a foundation rather than an add-on. It also connects directly to employability skills university outcomes. Employers today are not just looking for knowledge. They are looking for clarity in decision-making.
Reports around WEF future jobs skills consistently highlight leadership, adaptability, and problem-solving as essential. When viewed through that lens, the inclusion of leadership in formal education feels less like an experiment and more like an adjustment that was overdue.
The Core Tension
The academic leadership debate is not about whether leadership matters. It is about how it is taught. Here is where the tension becomes visible:
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Contemporary Leadership Education |
Risk |
Guardrail |
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Real-world relevance |
Bias |
Multi-perspective analysis |
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Engagement through current cases |
Ideological influence |
Faculty moderation frameworks |
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Skill-based learning |
Oversimplification |
Structured evaluation |
When teaching living leaders university models are introduced, the complexity increases. Unlike historical figures, contemporary leaders come with ongoing narratives and strong public opinions. This raises valid concerns about bias in leadership education.
The classroom, ideally, is a space for inquiry. The risk is that it may slowly become a space for influence if not handled with care.
Where the Debate Turns Real
The resistance to contemporary leadership education is rooted in a genuine concern. When current figures are discussed, neutrality becomes harder to maintain.
This is where the leadership curriculum 2026 faces its real test. If the structure is weak, the consequences are clear. Students may begin to absorb perspectives instead of analysing them. Discussions may lean toward agreement rather than exploration. Leadership may be reduced to personality instead of process.
At the same time, removing contemporary context entirely creates a different problem. It produces graduates who understand theories but struggle to apply them. The issue is not the presence of leadership studies. It is the absence of balance.
Role of Teachers, Professors & Stakeholders
The current leadership education discussion exists as a responsibility question which educators and academic leaders must address. The responsibility of teachers consists of establishing learning environments which enable students to conduct independent critical analysis of various concepts. The need for neutrality within educational environments reaches its highest point when modern classrooms implement leadership training programs.
The educational system must prioritize factual information together with contextual details and impartial evaluation of information irrespective of its connection to contemporary leadership education or its use in higher education teaching methods. Students should experience various viewpoints and opposing viewpoints together with all facts instead of being exposed to specific stories. The objective is not to create positive or negative feelings about any person or belief system or organization. The objective exists to achieve understanding.
Curriculum designers together with universities and faculty members must ensure academic neutrality through their selection of study materials which include books and case studies and classroom discussions. The curriculum guides students toward critical thinking skills through its design. The curriculum helps students develop skills to assess information through precise thinking methods.
The educational system gains strength through this method because it establishes trust in educational processes while maintaining the main goal of education which is to create knowledgeable and open-minded students who can think for themselves.
What This Means for the Future
As university curriculum trends 2026 continue to evolve, contemporary leadership education is becoming difficult to ignore. It speaks directly to the kind of world students are entering.
So, should leadership be taught in classrooms? Yes, but with intention, not as admiration or influence. But as disciplined thinking. Because education, at its core, is not about telling students what to believe but about giving them the ability to decide for themselves. Do you agree? Share your thoughts with us via mail at
The Edinbox Regional Higher Education Summit 2026 Jaipur Edition brought together key stakeholders from across the education sector, witnessing participation from over 150 universities, 2,000 students, and 50 school principals.
The one-day summit brought educators, academic leaders, and students together to discuss emerging higher education trends and career pathways. Designed to bridge the gap between schools and universities, the event focused on helping students make informed academic and professional choices.
Strong Focus on Career Guidance and Competitions
In addition to career counselling sessions, the summit featured five different competitions, encouraging student participation and showcasing talent across various domains. These activities added an interactive dimension to the event, making it more engaging for young attendees.
Platform for Dialogue and Collaboration
The summit facilitated conversations between school leaders, teachers, and higher education institutions on key issues shaping student journeys. With participation from principals and educators, the event highlighted the importance of collaboration in building smoother transitions from school to university.
Exploring Trends in Higher Education
Discussions at the summit revolved around emerging academic trends, evolving career opportunities, and the need to align education with industry demands. Participants exchanged ideas and insights on how institutions can adapt to changing learning environments and student expectations.
Building Future Pathways
By bringing together diverse stakeholders under one roof, the Edinbox summit created opportunities for networking, knowledge exchange, and institutional partnerships. For students, it offered exposure to a wide range of universities and courses, while educators gained insights into the future direction of higher education.
The Jaipur edition of the summit reinforced its role as a key regional platform driving dialogue, innovation, and collaboration in India’s higher education ecosystem.
Education must extend beyond textbooks and lecture halls to remain relevant in today’s fast-evolving world. Speaking at the Edinbox Regional Higher Education Summit 2026 held in Jaipur, Dr Sanjeev Bhanawat stressed the importance of platforms that connect students with real-world developments.
Calling such gatherings “essential,” Dr Bhanawat said events like these help students understand what lies beyond classroom learning. He praised EdInbox for taking a meaningful initiative in creating a space where education meets practical exposure. According to him, such forums play a critical role in bridging the gap between academic knowledge and real-life applications.
The summit brought together educators, policymakers, and experts from diverse fields, fostering a vibrant environment for dialogue and idea exchange. Dr Bhanawat noted that this diversity is key to encouraging meaningful conversations and collective brainstorming. He emphasised that such interactions allow fresh ideas to emerge while expanding the perspectives of both students and educators.
Highlighting the importance of networking, he expressed his interest in engaging with different stakeholders in education. He pointed out that these interactions help build awareness, promote collaboration, and provide clarity on evolving educational challenges.
In his address, Dr Bhanawat urged students to actively participate in such events. He underlined that platforms like the EdInbox Regional Higher Education Summit not only enhance knowledge but also prepare students to become more adaptable and informed individuals in a competitive global landscape.
The Edinbox Regional Higher Education Summit 2026, held on April 20 in Jaipur, infused fresh energy and direction into the city’s education ecosystem. Organised at the Rajasthan International Centre, the large-scale education event brought together students, school principals, and education experts on a single platform, fostering meaningful dialogue and new opportunities. Following its successful execution, the summit has become a key talking point among schools, students, and stakeholders.
The event stood out not just for its participation but also for its impact. School principals, students, and content creators from across the city actively engaged in the summit, describing it as a meaningful initiative.
The summit commenced at 10:30 AM with an inaugural session marked by the traditional lamp-lighting ceremony. The session was led by Prof. Ujjwal K. Chowdhury, Pro Vice Chancellor of Techno India University and Editorial Consultant at EdInbox.
The event also featured insights from distinguished guests, including Dr Sukhveer Singh and Dr Sanjeev Bhanawat, former Director of the Media Department at the University of Rajasthan and Editor-Publisher of Communication Today. Both speakers shared valuable perspectives on the evolving education landscape and the role of emerging technologies.
*Recognition and leadership platform for principals*
A major highlight of the summit was the ‘Principal Award of Honour’, where outstanding school leaders were felicitated on stage. The ceremony provided principals with a prestigious platform for recognition and opened avenues for dialogue and collaboration with universities.
In addition, principals participated in panel discussions on key topics such as changing education trends, new policies, and school-university partnerships. These sessions enabled them to share experiences, express their views, and become part of a strong leadership network.
*Career guidance and competitions for students*
For students, the summit served as a significant career platform. City-level competitions saw enthusiastic participation, offering opportunities to win awards while showcasing creativity, awareness, and communication skills.
Students also benefited from free counselling sessions, insights into national-level entrance exams, and direct interaction with university representatives. Within a single day, they gained valuable guidance to shape their academic and career paths.
*A hub for content creators*
The summit also emerged as a vibrant platform for Jaipur’s content creators and influencers. Youth participation, live competitions, and career-focused discussions provided rich content opportunities. Creators working in education and youth-centric domains actively covered the event, recognising its relevance.
*Why the summit matters*
At a time when students often feel uncertain about career choices and schools seek stronger university connections, the summit offered a practical solution. It successfully brought students, schools, and universities onto one platform.
Overall, the EdInbox Regional Higher Education Summit 2026 proved to be more than just an event. It offered students clarity in career decisions, gave principals a platform for recognition, and established itself as a meaningful educational initiative for the city.
Current Events
Researchers at the Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati have developed an advanced nanomaterial-based technology aimed at strengthening protection against counterfeit currency, forged documents and fake products.
The breakthrough, published in Advanced Optical Materials, uses specially engineered perovskite nanocrystals that produce highly secure light-emitting patterns resistant to heat, chemicals, and environmental damage.
Scientists say the innovation could significantly improve anti-counterfeiting systems at a time when modern forgery techniques are becoming increasingly sophisticated and capable of replicating conventional security features with high precision.
The IIT Guwahati team designed the nanocrystals using a unique double-layer protective coating that preserves their optical performance while improving stability. The material emits highly pure and intense colours with narrow emission ranges, creating precise optical signatures that are difficult to duplicate.
Researchers explained that these properties allow the technology to function as a “4D anti-counterfeiting” system, adding an extra layer of authentication complexity beyond visible security markings.
Using direct laser writing technology, the team successfully created microscopic security patterns without requiring lithographic masks. The process achieved resolutions between 10 and 40 micrometres, enabling highly detailed patterns capable of storing encoded information for secure identification and verification.
According to the researchers, the intricate designs and specialised material behaviour make replication extremely challenging for counterfeiters, as they would need to reproduce not only the visible patterns but also the unique optical and environmental responses of the nanocrystals.
Beyond security applications, the technology may also find use in next-generation consumer electronics. Scientists noted that the same nanocrystal-based approach could support the development of micro-LED displays for smartphones, wearable devices and augmented reality systems.
Experts believe the innovation has the potential to transform authentication systems across sectors such as banking, pharmaceuticals, luxury goods and official documentation. If adopted widely, it could contribute to establishing more advanced global standards for anti-counterfeiting technologies.
However, researchers also acknowledged that large-scale adoption may depend on manufacturing costs, industry integration and regulatory support. Industry observers suggest that collaboration between research institutions, policymakers and private companies will be essential for translating the laboratory breakthrough into commercial and public security applications.
Thousands of UPSC aspirants emerged from examination centres describing the Civil Services Preliminary Examination (UPSC Prelims) 2026 as one of the most challenging and unpredictable papers in recent years, triggering widespread debate across coaching circles and social media platforms.
Candidates reported facing lengthy analytical questions, closely worded answer choices and a noticeable emphasis on conceptual understanding rather than direct factual recall. Many aspirants said the paper demanded significantly more time per question, making time management one of the biggest challenges during the examination.
The UPSC Civil Services Examination, regarded as one of India's most competitive recruitment tests for services such as the IAS, IPS and IFS, attracts lakhs of candidates every year. This year's preliminary examination has generated particularly strong reactions due to its perceived difficulty level and changing question patterns.
Aspirants Cite Lengthy Paper and Time Pressure
One of the most discussed aspects of the examination was the apparent increase in the size of the question booklet. Several candidates claimed that the paper appeared longer than in previous years, with many reporting an increase from around 48 pages to 56 pages.
While the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) has not issued any statement regarding the paper length, aspirants argued that the additional reading burden affected their ability to manage time effectively during the examination.
Many candidates said they were forced to spend more time understanding questions and evaluating answer choices, leaving less time for revision and calculated attempts.
Shift Towards Analytical Thinking
Initial reactions from aspirants and coaching experts suggest that UPSC Prelims 2026 placed greater emphasis on analytical reasoning, interpretation and conceptual clarity.
Several candidates observed that familiar subjects appeared in unfamiliar formats. Instead of straightforward factual questions, many questions reportedly required deeper understanding and the ability to apply concepts across different topics.
This approach, according to educators, aligns with UPSC's broader trend of assessing comprehension, critical thinking and decision-making rather than testing memorisation alone.
Social Media Flooded With Reactions
Shortly after the examination concluded, social media platforms were flooded with reactions from aspirants discussing the paper's difficulty level. Many candidates described the examination as mentally exhausting, while others compared it with some of the toughest UPSC prelims papers in recent memory. Coaching institutes also began publishing preliminary analyses, with several experts noting that question framing and option elimination appeared more challenging than expected.
However, some educators cautioned against drawing immediate conclusions, noting that perceptions of difficulty often vary among candidates and that a clearer picture will emerge only after detailed analysis and official answer keys become available.
Cut-Off Predictions Still Premature
With the examination now over, discussions have already begun around expected cut-offs and qualifying scores. Experts, however, say it is too early to accurately predict the final cut-off without comprehensive performance data from candidates across the country.
The actual impact of the paper's perceived difficulty will become clearer in the coming weeks as coaching institutes release detailed reviews and aspirants compare responses. For now, one thing is certain: UPSC Prelims 2026 has sparked a national conversation about the evolving nature of India's toughest competitive examination.
Whether the paper ultimately proves to be among the most difficult in recent years will depend on official data and candidate performance. But judging by the immediate reaction from examination centres across the country, this year's prelims has left a lasting impression on aspirants.
A growing number of people around the world are deliberately turning away from the news, not because they are indifferent, but because constant exposure to negative information is becoming emotionally exhausting.
According to the 2025 Digital News Report released by the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, nearly 40 per cent of people globally now say they sometimes or often avoid the news — the highest level ever recorded. In Canada alone, 69 per cent reported occasionally disengaging from news consumption.
Psychologists say the trend reflects a deeper neurological reality rather than a decline in civic awareness. Researchers studying human behaviour argue that the modern information ecosystem is overwhelming a brain that evolved to respond primarily to immediate, local threats.
At the centre of this explanation is what scientists call the “negativity bias,” a widely studied psychological phenomenon showing that humans process negative information more intensely than positive experiences. Across decades of cognitive research, the brain has consistently been shown to detect threats faster, react more strongly to bad news and remember distressing information longer.
From an evolutionary perspective, this response once helped humans survive. Paying attention to danger — such as predators, conflict or scarcity — increased the chances of survival. Missing a threat could be fatal, while overreacting merely cost a few moments of caution.
However, experts argue that the same survival mechanism is now being stretched beyond its limits in the digital age.
Unlike earlier generations that mainly dealt with nearby social and environmental risks, modern audiences are exposed to a nonstop stream of global crises — wars, climate disasters, economic instability, violence and political conflict — often within minutes of waking up.
A study published in Nature Human Behaviour analysing over 105,000 news headlines found that negative language significantly increased click-through rates, while positive wording reduced engagement. Researchers say this creates a feedback loop where emotionally distressing content receives greater visibility online.
Some psychologists have described extreme forms of compulsive news engagement as “Problematic News Consumption” (PNC), a condition linked to anxiety, stress and disruptions in daily functioning. Studies suggest individuals experiencing severe levels of PNC report substantially poorer mental well-being.
Researchers also note that news fatigue can be especially intense for immigrant and minority communities, who may experience repeated exposure to stories involving violence, discrimination or instability affecting their countries or communities of origin.
At the same time, experts caution that complete disengagement from credible journalism is not a healthy solution. Democracies rely on informed citizens, and withdrawing entirely from reliable information may increase vulnerability to misinformation and manipulation.
Instead, psychologists recommend developing healthier news habits. Suggested strategies include limiting news intake to specific times of the day, prioritising in-depth reporting over endless social media scrolling and avoiding “rage bait” — emotionally provocative online content designed mainly to trigger outrage and maximise engagement.
Mental health researchers also stress the importance of distinguishing between awareness and control. Studies show that stress increases when individuals feel informed about problems but powerless to influence outcomes. Identifying small, meaningful actions connected to issues in the news can help reduce feelings of helplessness.
Experts believe the challenge is no longer simply staying informed, but learning how to engage with information in a more intentional and psychologically sustainable way in an era of constant digital exposure.
Malayalam cinema legend Mammootty was conferred an honorary Doctor of Letters (DLitt) by Mahatma Gandhi University on Monday in recognition of his outstanding contribution to Indian cinema.
The honorary doctorate was presented during the university’s convocation ceremony in Kottayam by Rajendra Vishwanath Arlekar. The university cited Mammootty’s unparalleled service to cinema and his lasting cultural impact as the basis for the honour.
Reacting to the recognition, the actor shared photographs from the ceremony on social media and expressed gratitude to his supporters. “Humbled to have received the Honorary DLitt from Mahatma Gandhi University today, presented by the Honourable Governor of Kerala. My gratitude to each and every one of you who stood by my side throughout this memorable journey,” he wrote.
This marks the third honorary doctorate awarded to Mammootty by a state university in Kerala. In 2010, the University of Kerala conferred a DLitt on him for his contributions to art and literature through cinema. Later the same year, the University of Calicut also honoured him for his lifelong dedication to artistic work and public service.
During his address at the convocation, Mammootty struck an emotional chord with the audience while reflecting on his journey in cinema.
“My father wanted me to become a doctor,” the actor said, adding, “but now I’ve been able to treat you, not patients, but you, through cinema for the past 45 years.”
The remark drew loud applause from the gathering, highlighting the deep emotional connection the actor shares with audiences across generations.
With a career spanning more than five decades, Mammootty has acted in over 400 films across multiple languages and genres. He has won three National Film Awards for Best Actor, jointly holding the second-highest number of wins in the category alongside Kamal Haasan and Ajay Devgn.
The Government of India announced the Padma Bhushan for Mammootty in 2026 for his contribution to cinema. He had earlier received the Padma Shri in 1998.
On the professional front, Mammootty was recently seen in the political espionage drama Patriot directed by Mahesh Narayanan. The film also marked his on-screen reunion with Mohanlal after nearly 17 years.
More than two decades after becoming Kerala’s first baby born through the Assisted Hatching Technique, a young woman has returned to the same fertility clinic — this time as a doctor.
The emotional reunion recently unfolded at a fertility centre in Kerala, where doctors recalled the groundbreaking case that once offered hope to a woman struggling with infertility for 14 years. According to the clinic, the child born through the then-advanced reproductive procedure has now qualified as a medical doctor and revisited the institution where her life journey began.
The fertility specialist who handled the historic case described the moment as a “full-circle experience,” recalling how the child’s mother had undergone years of failed treatments and emotional setbacks before opting for the Assisted Hatching Technique.
At the time, the procedure was considered a major breakthrough in reproductive medicine in Kerala. Assisted hatching is an IVF-related laboratory technique that helps an embryo break through its outer shell before implantation, improving the chances of pregnancy in selected infertility cases.
Doctors at the clinic said the successful birth not only marked a medical milestone for the state but also became a symbol of hope for couples facing infertility challenges.
More than 20 years later, the same child walked back into the clinic as Dr. Mariya, carrying her own stethoscope and preparing for a career in healthcare.
The doctor who delivered her at birth said seeing the former “miracle baby” return as a healthcare professional was deeply emotional and reaffirmed the purpose behind years of work in reproductive medicine.
“She was once the newborn we carefully brought into this world. Today, she stands before us as a doctor ready to heal others,” the fertility specialist said while reflecting on the encounter.
The clinic noted that while reproductive medicine often focuses on procedures, technologies, and success rates, stories like this highlight the long-term human impact behind fertility treatments.
Medical experts say assisted reproductive technologies have transformed infertility care across India over the last two decades, allowing thousands of couples to conceive despite complex medical challenges. Cases such as this, they added, demonstrate how advances in fertility science can shape lives across generations.
For the doctors involved, the reunion served as a reminder that the children born through fertility treatments grow up to build lives, careers, and futures beyond the clinic walls — sometimes even returning to medicine itself.
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