Pearson BTEC Connect 2025 was held on 4 December 2025 in Hyderabad as a focused stakeholder engagement that brought together leaders from academia, industry, EdTech and the skills ecosystem to examine how higher education in India must evolve to meet the demands of the future of work.
Hosted by Pearson, the event aimed to strengthen dialogue around skills-first education, applied learning models and globally recognised progression pathways, while fostering deeper collaboration between education providers, industry and other key stakeholders shaping India’s workforce readiness.
Pearson BTEC Connect 2025: Skills, employability and global pathways
The event opened with a contextual overview of Pearson BTEC qualifications, emphasizing their core philosophy of experiential, industry-aligned and project-based learning. BTEC programmes are designed to move beyond exam-centric education and enable learners to demonstrate what they know through real-world assignments, presentations, portfolios and workplace exposure. Delivered across multiple countries and sectors, BTEC provides structured pathways from foundational levels through to higher national and postgraduate qualifications, supporting both employment and further education globally.
A learner story shared during the session brought this philosophy to life. A BTEC Higher National alumna from Chennai reflected on how applied assessments, group projects and practical learning helped her build confidence, communication skills and clarity of thought, eventually enabling her to progress to a Master’s programme in the UK. The narrative reinforced how experiential learning can meaningfully prepare learners for global mobility and long-term career growth.

Pearson BTEC Connect: Structure, recognition and flexibility
This segment featured presentations by Mr. Surya Bibile, Regional Manager – South Asia, Pearson BTEC, along with Mr. Mustafa Rehman, Pearson, who outlined the BTEC qualification framework, global recognition, and learner progression pathways.
The event highlighted the strength and scale of the BTEC ecosystem. With qualifications spanning Levels 1 to 7, BTEC offers flexible, modular learning pathways that align with academic frameworks while remaining deeply connected to industry needs. Assessments are largely portfolio-based, and curricula are reviewed periodically to ensure relevance to evolving skills demand.
Panel discussion: Rethinking higher education for the future of work
The second half of the event featured a panel discussion titled “Rethinking Higher Education for the Future of Work”. The panel brought together perspectives from skills advocacy, academia, EdTech and industry leadership.
The panel discussion was moderated by Ms. Yasmin Taj, Editor, ET Education and ETHR World, and featured:
- Mr. Vinay Kumar Swamy, Country Head, Pearson India
- Dr. Madhuri Dubey, Founder and Director, National Skills Network-NSN
- Mr. Prakash Pathak, Head of Corporate Relations and Strategic Planning Committee Member, IMT Hyderabad
- Mr. Utsav Thapliyal, AVP – Insights and Product, ConveGenius
The discussion opened with a rapid-fire round. Panelists identified curiosity, problem-solving, collaboration, leadership, empathy and a human-centred approach to technology as essential skills for today’s learners. There was strong consensus that institutions must urgently stop offering outdated and irrelevant programmes, and instead focus on relevance, application and meaningful partnerships.
Key gaps and systemic challenges
A central theme that emerged was the persistent disconnect between what institutions teach and what employers expect. Panelists pointed to the continued reliance on rote-based assessments, even as the economy increasingly demands critical thinking, application and adaptability. Industry no longer has the bandwidth to train graduates extensively after hiring, making job readiness at the point of graduation critical.
Speakers also highlighted deeper systemic issues. Skill development in India is often treated as a reactive, short-term intervention rather than a proactive, integrated part of mainstream education. Low transition rates from school to higher education, limited awareness among students and parents about skill-based pathways, and insufficient faculty preparedness were identified as major barriers to scaling employability-driven education.
From a technology and learner behaviour perspective, the panel noted that Gen Z and Gen Alpha learners expect flexibility, personalisation and modular learning pathways. Skills need to be stackable and cross-disciplinary, allowing learners to build customised career trajectories rather than follow rigid, linear programmes.
Actionable takeaways for institutions
The discussion concluded with clear, practical recommendations for institutions:
- Build sustained, on-ground engagement with local industry by involving both faculty and students
- Redesign assessments to evaluate skills and application rather than memory
- Secure leadership buy-in to drive curriculum and delivery reform
- Leverage technology and national frameworks to enable flexible, verifiable and personalised learning pathways
- Strengthen public–private collaboration to scale quality skill credentials
Building a skills-first, future-ready higher education ecosystem in India
Pearson BTEC Connect reinforced a critical message for India’s education ecosystem: the future belongs to learners who can apply knowledge, adapt to change and innovate in real-world contexts. As India works towards expanding access to higher education and improving employability outcomes, models rooted in applied learning, industry integration and global standards; such as BTEC, offer a clear and scalable direction.
The event underscored that meaningful reform will require more than policy intent alone. Sustained collaboration between academia, industry, government and education providers, combined with mindset change and on-ground implementation, will be essential to building a truly future-ready education system.
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