The third meeting of the Australia-India Education and Skills Council (AIESC), co-chaired by Australia’s Minister for Education Jason Clare and India’s Minister for Education Dharmendra Pradhan, has delivered tangible progress in bilateral education cooperation. Held in New Delhi in October 2024, the session resulted in several new Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs), curriculum alignment initiatives, and jointly funded research projects that will directly benefit institutions in Karnataka and beyond.
Curriculum Alignment: Bringing Australian Early-Years Expertise to Indian Classrooms
One of the standout outcomes is the agreement to align India’s National Curriculum Framework for the Foundational Stage (under CBSE) with Australia’s Early Years Learning Framework (EYLF) and the Australian Curriculum. This collaboration aims to strengthen early childhood care and education (ECCE) across India by incorporating globally recognised play-based and child-centred pedagogies.
For Karnataka, the impact will be immediate and practical. The state’s Department of School Education and the Karnataka State Council for Educational Research and Training (SCERT) have been actively involved in pilot programmes. Several government and private schools in Bengaluru, Mysuru, and Hubballi-Dharwad are already testing blended frameworks that combine Australian learning-through-play approaches with Indian cultural contexts. Teachers are receiving joint training modules delivered by Deakin University and Azim Premji University experts.
New Wave of Joint Research in Frontier Technologies
The meeting also launched the latest round of the Australia-India Research Collaboration Fund (part of the broader SPARC and AISRF schemes), with ₹9.84 crore (approximately A$1.8 million) awarded to eight high-impact projects. Three of these directly involve Karnataka-based institutions:
- Indian Institute of Science (IISc) Bengaluru and University of Melbourne: Quantum sensing and secure communication systems
- Manipal Academy of Higher Education and University of Sydney: AI-driven MedTech solutions for diabetic retinopathy screening
- International Institute of Information Technology Bangalore (IIIT-B) and Queensland University of Technology: Responsible AI frameworks for smart cities
These projects build on existing strengths: IISc’s quantum research facilities, Manipal’s large clinical datasets, and IIIT-B’s expertise in AI ethics. Researchers will have reciprocal access to advanced labs in both countries and joint PhD supervision arrangements.
Institutional Partnerships Deepen
Several MoUs signed during or immediately after the AIESC meeting will strengthen Karnataka’s higher education ecosystem:
- Deakin University renewed and expanded its long-standing partnership with JSS Academy of Higher Technical Education, Mauritius, and is exploring a similar hub model in Karnataka.
- University of Western Australia and NITK Surathkal agreed to dual-degree pathways in mining engineering and critical minerals processing – an area of growing strategic importance.
- RMIT University and RV University (Bengaluru) launched a transnational Bachelor of Design programme with built-in student exchange.
What This Means for Students and Faculty in Karnataka
- More opportunities for short-term study tours, semester exchanges, and fully funded dual degrees.
- Access to Australian scholarships (Destination Australia, New Colombo Plan) specifically earmarked for Indian students from partner institutions.
- Enhanced employability through exposure to Australian vocational training models (VET) in fields such as aged care, renewable energy, and advanced manufacturing.
- Faculty development programmes that blend Australian pedagogical training with local needs.
Looking Ahead
Both ministers committed to convene the next AIESC meeting in Australia in 2025 and to operationalise the previously announced Australian campus presence of Deakin and Wollongong universities in Gujarat by drawing lessons that can be adapted for future campuses in other states, including Karnataka.
With India aiming to become the third-largest economy and a global skills powerhouse, and Australia seeking deeper engagement in the Indo-Pacific, education and research collaboration is emerging as one of the most productive pillars of the Australia-India Comprehensive Strategic Partnership.
For students, teachers, and researchers in Karnataka, the third AIESC meeting was not just another diplomatic event; it translated into real funding, real partnerships, and real opportunities that will shape classrooms and laboratories for years to come.