EDUNEWS & VIEWS
Reliance Foundation Selects 5,000 Students for 2024-25 Undergraduate Scholarships
5,000 students selected from nearly 100,000 applicants for one of India’s largest scholarship programs
Reliance Foundation, the philanthropic arm of India’s biggest business empire Reliance Industries Limited, announced the results of its Undergraduate Scholarships for the 2024-25 academic year. A total of 5,000 students from across India have been selected for this year’s cohort, marking another step in the foundation’s ongoing efforts to support and empower young talent.
The scholarship program, launched in 2022, is part of Reliance Foundation’s broader commitment to awarding 50,000 scholarships over the next decade. This year, the foundation received nearly 100,000 applications from first-year undergraduate students across India’s diverse states and union territories.
Selected scholars are eligible for financial grants of up to INR 200,000 (approximately USD 2,400) to cover tuition fees, hostel costs, and other educational expenses. In addition, the program offers mentorship and opportunities for holistic development, including access to workshops, seminars, and professional training to build both technical and soft skills.
Of the 5,000 scholars, approximately 70% come from households with an annual income of less than INR 250,000 (about USD 3,000). Furthermore, 83% of the selected students have secured more than 90% marks in their Class XII examinations. The cohort also includes 147 students with disabilities. Scholars represent 540 districts across India, studying in 1,300 institutions.
“We are privileged to recognise and support these exceptional young minds. Through the Reliance Foundation Undergraduate Scholarships, we aim to empower students to reach their full potential and make significant contributions to India’s growth story,” said a spokesperson from Reliance Foundation. “The application process received an overwhelming response, with close to one lakh applications. The 5,000 selected scholars were identified through a competitive process. Education is the key to unlocking opportunities, and we are proud to be part of these students’ transformative journeys.”
Reliance Foundation’s undergraduate scholarship program continues to be one of the largest and most inclusive private initiatives for higher education in India.
The Sciences
STEM Scholarships for First-Generation College Students: Breaking the Cycle of Poverty
STEM scholarships help first-generation college students access higher education, build careers and break cycles of generational poverty.
STEM scholarships are helping first-generation college students overcome financial barriers, access technical education and build careers that can transform families and communities.
In many households across India, the dream of higher education is often overshadowed by the immediate need to make ends meet. For a first-generation college student, earning a university degree is more than a personal achievement; it is a responsibility carried on behalf of an entire family.

While access to basic education has expanded significantly, entering specialised professional fields remains difficult for students from disadvantaged backgrounds. Science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) disciplines offer one of the most effective pathways out of poverty, yet they are often the hardest to access. The challenge begins long before the first day of college. Talent alone cannot bridge the gap between a modest household and a modern laboratory. Beyond tuition fees, students face a range of hidden costs and barriers that make technical education difficult to pursue.
Without a financial safety net, many capable students are forced to abandon their studies or take up low-skilled jobs to support their families
The Financial Barrier to Technical Education
For a first-generation student, choosing to study engineering, medicine or other STEM disciplines can be a daunting financial decision. Unlike many other degree programmes, STEM courses often involve higher tuition fees, laboratory expenses and intensive academic schedules that leave little time for part-time work.
Without a financial safety net, many capable students are forced to abandon their studies or take up low-skilled jobs to support their families. This is where STEM-focused scholarships can make a meaningful difference.
The most effective scholarship programmes do far more than cover tuition. They often support living expenses, books, learning materials and travel costs. By reducing financial pressure, scholarships allow students to focus on their studies and complete their degrees successfully. Yet financial support alone is only one part of the solution.
Bridging the Skills Gap and Creating Livelihoods
The value of a STEM education extends well beyond individual success. In today’s technology-driven economy, technical skills have become increasingly valuable, opening doors to careers that can transform lives and communities.
First-generation graduates often find opportunities in fast-growing sectors such as healthcare, nursing, pharmacy, engineering and technology. Stable and well-paying jobs can help families move beyond cycles of poverty that may have persisted for generations.
For young women in particular, STEM scholarships can be transformative. Targeted support helps address barriers such as financial constraints, social expectations and unequal access to opportunities.
When a young woman from an underserved community becomes a healthcare professional, engineer or software developer, her success often inspires others around her. The impact extends beyond one individual, encouraging more students to pursue higher education and professional careers. In this way, scholarships help create a new generation of skilled professionals who better reflect the diversity of the society they serve.
Nurturing Growth Beyond the Classroom
There is growing recognition that scholarships should be viewed not simply as financial assistance but as an investment in human potential.
Many first-generation students face uncertainty when transitioning from education to employment. The strongest scholarship models therefore combine financial support with mentorship, career guidance and skills development.
Funding alone is not enough. Students also need exposure to professional environments and opportunities to develop workplace skills. Digital learning platforms, mentoring programmes, skill-building workshops and industry interactions can help bridge this gap.
When students are supported through a broader ecosystem, they are better prepared for life after graduation. They enter the workforce not merely as degree holders but as confident professionals equipped to compete in a rapidly changing economy.
Ultimately, targeted STEM scholarships can turn structural barriers into opportunities. By enabling talented students to access education, develop skills and secure meaningful careers, they help break cycles of generational poverty while contributing to a more equitable and prosperous society.
EDUNEWS & VIEWS
India’s Moment: The Race to Become the World’s Next Great Study Destination
With Anglophone giants closing their doors, a recent QS report reveals how India is positioning itself as the global higher education alternative – but warns that reputation and infrastructure gaps could hold it back.
India is on the cusp of a significant shift in global higher education. According to the QS Global Student Flows: India 2026 report — now in its eighth year and drawing on data from over 70,000 students across 191 countries — inbound international student numbers are forecast to grow at approximately 8% per year from an estimated base of 58,000 in 2025, making India one of the fastest-growing study destinations in the world.
The timing is not coincidental. As the United States, Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom tighten visa routes and raise costs, students across South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East are actively looking for alternatives. India — affordable, English-medium, and geographically proximate — is increasingly the answer.
South Asia anchors India’s international student body, accounting for nearly half of all foreign enrolments. Nepal and Bangladesh together represent over 30% of arrivals, with Nepal projected to grow at around 11% annually through 2030. African demand is rising quickly too. Zimbabwe stands out, with projected annual growth of around 11%, which would lift it from India’s seventh-largest African source country to sixth by 2030. The UAE is the leading Middle Eastern contributor, expected to account for around 5% of India’s inbound population by the decade’s end.

Government policy is accelerating this momentum. The Study in India programme has streamlined admissions and reduced financial barriers, while the National Education Policy 2020 has enabled foreign universities to open local campuses and expanded the number of seats available to international students. India’s longer-term ambition — to host 500,000 foreign students by 2047 — signals strong political intent.
Yet the report is equally candid about what could derail this trajectory. While Indian universities have improved their employer reputation rankings significantly — rising 61 places in median rank since 2017 — academic reputation rankings have seen little progress, and this matters: over 70% of Middle Eastern students cite institutional reputation as a decisive factor. The employability gap is equally concerning; only 42.6% of Indian graduates are considered job-ready according to a 2025 Mercer-Mettl report, even as employer reputation continues to climb. Infrastructure, too, remains a pressure point — rapid expansion without commensurate investment in housing and student support risks undermining the experience India is trying to sell.
On outbound flows, India remains the world’s second-largest source of international students, with over 800,000 studying overseas. But the traditional Big Four destinations are forecast to see a small average decline of 0.5% in Indian enrolments through 2030, as Germany, France, and the UAE emerge as preferred alternatives.
EDUNEWS & VIEWS
Vidya Vanam to Host National Conference on AI in Education
Vidya Vanam will host a national conference on AI in education in May, bringing experts and students together to discuss future learning trends.
India’s Coimbatore-based Vidya Vanam Senior Secondary School will host its Sixth National Conference on Education on May 29 and 30, focusing on the theme “AI in Education.” The two-day conference will bring together educators, policymakers, researchers, artists, and students to explore how artificial intelligence is reshaping learning, teaching, and assessment.
The conference will examine a wide range of themes, including AI and employability, the human element in learning, creativity in the age of AI, responsible use of AI, AI in research, and AI-enabled assessment systems. A dedicated student panel featuring participants from schools and colleges will offer young learners’ perspectives on the growing role of AI in education.
Jibu Elias, head of the Responsible Computing Challenge in India at the Mozilla Foundation, will deliver the keynote address. The valedictory address will be given by S. Krishnan, Secretary, Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, Government of India.
The conference will also feature a diverse lineup of speakers, including Rishikesha Krishnan (IIM Bangalore), Sai Narayanan Sundarakrishnan (Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham), Nandan Sudarsanam (IIT Madras), Salil Sahadevan (UGC), Shruthi Viswanathan (NCBS Bengaluru), Pon Mythili M. (Great Lakes Institute of Management), and Sakshi Kathuria (JAGSoM). Creative voices such as theatre artist Parshathy Nath, musician Vignesh Ishwar, artist Parvathy Nayar, and author Sandhya Rao will also contribute to discussions on creativity and human expression in the age of AI.
The event will be held at the Vidya Vanam campus on Thuvaipathy Road, Anaikatti, Coimbatore, and is open to educators, students, and the public. Registration is available through the official event page or via email and phone contact provided by the organisers.
For a deeper exploration of how artificial intelligence is transforming education, read the cover story of Education Publica on AI Literacy here.
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