Monthly Newsletter | August 2025 | Volume 72
August 2025 has grown into a determining month for education in India, highlighting innovative campaigns, future-ready learning, and bold reforms. The month catches how boards, policymakers, and schools are shaping classrooms with technology and tradition.
The focus is local and global at once this August. With initiatives directed at bringing world education to your backyard, schools in India are opening doors to international standards when raising homegrown excellence. CBSE has flourished its visual health campaign, going beyond sugar awareness to cover oil consumption, accentuating the significance of student well-being besides academics.
The Delhi Directorate of Education launched an automated draw model, assuring fairness and transparency in school seat allotment on the admissions front. Assam’s successful education system is being scaled across the nation, indicating how regional inventions can inspire nationwide impact throughout states. Similarly, CBSE stiffened its supervision with a surprise inspection blitz, cracking down on school violations and safeguarding academic integrity.
Adding to this, AI has shifted from a pilot subject to a conventional curriculum, with thousands of schools adopting AI learning for future-ready skills. Education in India stands at a crossroads, mixing health awareness, universal exposure, strict accountability, and digital transformation in August.
Now, Indian students can make the Ontario Secondary School Diploma directly from their classrooms in Gujarat for the first time. Ahmedabad has attained a milestone in Indian education as Udgam Cons...
The CBSE has compounded its attempts to develop healthier school ecospaces by launching ‘Oil Boards’ throughout its affiliated schools. This movement follows its May month’s direc...
The Directorate of Education (DoE) in Delhi has chosen 6,000 students for entry-level admissions in private recognised unaided schools under the Disadvantaged Group (DG), Childr...
The students of different Kendriya Vidyalayas in Assam are struggling with social anxiety, hyperactivity, low self-confidence, and fear of certain subjects, which has become an everyday reality. Assisting not only these three but thousands of others as well through performance anxiety, academic challenges, personal difficulties, and behavioural issues at home. The teachers stepped in as mentors, and 2,000+ students throughout the state have gained from this innovative mentorship programme. Each One Reach One recently finished its first year.
Chandrashekhar Azad, the Deputy Commissioner of KV Sangathan, Guwahati regional office, sai...
The CBSE on Friday (01.08.2025) fulfilled surprise inspections at 15 schools throughout 7 states and Union Territories to find out violations like non-attend...
The CBSE has quickly elaborated on the teaching of AI in schools. AI has developed from a pilot initiative into a substantial part of school education in jus...