YUVA AI for All Course is emerging as a key initiative under India’s push toward AI literacy and workforce readiness. As India continues to strengthen its AI ecosystem through national initiatives and industry collaborations, the focus is steadily shifting toward AI literacy, workforce preparedness, and responsible adoption. Building practical AI capabilities for students, educators, and professionals has now become a clear priority.
In this conversation, Dr. Madhuri Dubey, Founder and Director, National Skills Network (NSN) speaks with Dr. Abhilasha Gaur, CEO, SSC NASSCOM (IT-ITES Sector Skill Council) about YUVA AI for All, a 4.5-hour structured course under the IndiaAI Mission designed to make AI literacy accessible to learners across backgrounds.
The course covers AI fundamentals, generative AI, responsible AI practices, and the CRAFT prompting framework. It is available in 12 regional languages and offers certification upon completion.
The discussion also examines how AI is reshaping education, employability, and job roles across sectors, and why human + AI collaboration is becoming essential; a theme that is also central to conversations at the India AI Impact Summit in New Delhi.
Below are a few excerpts from our conversation. You can watch the full video on our YouTube channel.
Q. What is YUVA AI for All and how will it support learners in building AI skills?
A. Artificial Intelligence is already transforming how we learn, work, govern, and innovate. Under the IndiaAI Mission led by the Ministry of Electronics and IT, there is a clear vision to strengthen India’s leadership in AI while ensuring that its adoption remains ethical, responsible, inclusive, and aligned with self-reliance.
At the heart of this vision lies one important principle; AI should not remain limited to experts. It must be accessible to every citizen. That is precisely the purpose of the YUVA AI for All course.
This 4.5-hour structured program is designed for learners from diverse backgrounds; students, professionals, educators, entrepreneurs, and curious individuals, regardless of age or occupation. It focuses on building practical AI literacy so that participants can confidently engage with AI tools in their daily and professional lives.
The course consists of six modules covering:
- Introduction to AI and Machine Learning
- Evolution, capabilities, and limitations of AI
- How machines learn
- Generative AI and prompt engineering
- Responsible and ethical AI use
- The future of human–AI collaboration
Developed by AI experts Jaspreet Bindra and Anuj Magazine from AI and Beyond, the course uses relatable Indian examples and real-world applications.
A key highlight is the CRAFT framework for effective prompting, which teaches learners how to structure interactions with AI tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, or Claude:
- C – Context: Provide background information
- R – Role: Specify the role you want the AI to assume
- A – Action: Clearly define the task
- F – Format: Indicate the desired output structure
- T – Tone: Define the voice or style
Through this structured approach, learners understand how to move beyond casual usage and develop meaningful AI collaboration skills.
Overall, the goal of YUVA AI for All is simple yet powerful; to ensure that every Indian becomes AI-aware, AI-capable, and AI-responsible.
Q. Does learning to work effectively with AI depend largely on how we use and prompt it?
A. I would strongly encourage learners to visit the FutureSkills Prime platform and explore the YUVA AI for All course. It offers a hands-on learning experience that allows participants to actively engage with AI concepts rather than just reading about them. Upon successful completion, learners also receive a certification issued by the Ministry and the Sector Skill Council, which adds significant credibility and value.

Q. How is SSC NASSCOM supporting students and job seekers in preparing for AI-driven roles across industries?
A. Over the past decade, digital skills were considered an advantage. Today, with AI advancing rapidly, they are becoming a baseline requirement for employability. Unlike earlier technologies, AI is not creating a separate sector; it is embedding itself across industries such as finance, HR, healthcare, manufacturing, and government services.
At SSC NASSCOM, we see three key shifts:
- AI is moving from a specialized skill to a foundational one, every professional is now expected to work with AI tools.
- Due to a significant demand–supply gap in AI talent, companies are shifting from degree-based hiring to skill-based hiring. AI literacy is becoming a basic professional capability.
- Jobs are evolving into human–AI collaboration roles, where professionals must prompt, validate, and interpret AI outputs rather than simply perform repetitive tasks.
In response, we are promoting micro-credentials, T-shaped learning models, and sector-integrated AI programs. Through the FutureSkills Prime platform, AI and Big Data Analytics courses are available, ranging from short modules to advanced programs.
The future workforce will not be divided into technical and non-technical roles, but into those who can work with AI and those who cannot.
Q. How can we make AI adoption in schools and colleges more inclusive and positively accepted, especially among educators?
A. The real challenge is not whether AI will enter education, it already has. The challenge is shifting the narrative from fear of replacement to empowerment through augmentation.
AI works best when it enhances human thinking. For instance, a school student struggling with a concept like fractions can receive personalized explanations tailored to their interests. In higher education, AI can act as a thinking partner, helping a commerce student interpret financial statements rather than just prepare them.
For teachers, AI reduces clerical work and allows more time for mentoring. It does not replace educators; it supports them.
Ultimately, literacy today also means knowing when AI is right and when it may be wrong. Used responsibly, AI moves education from memorizing answers to asking better questions, preparing learners for a collaborative human + AI future.
Q. What are the key human-centric skills individuals should develop to use AI tools effectively?
A. Some human-centric skills become especially important when working with AI.
- Curiosity: The desire to ask deeper questions and go beyond surface-level answers. Curiosity drives better prompts and better learning.
- Application mindset: AI can generate outputs, but the real value lies in how you apply those insights to solve practical problems.
- Structured prompting: The ability to clearly frame your problem, using approaches like the CRAFT framework; improves the quality of responses.
- Problem-solving skills: AI can assist, but human judgment is needed to interpret results and make decisions.
- Lifelong learning mindset: Since technology evolves continuously, staying adaptable and committed to learning is critical at every stage of life.
Ultimately, AI enhances human capability, but it is these human skills that determine how effectively we use it.
Also read: YUVA AI for All: Government of India’s Free AI Course Under IndiaAI Mission
Q. Is there any final message you would like to share for our audience?
A. I would just like to add that AI is not replacing jobs, it is reshaping them. Many students often ask what they should study in this changing landscape. The answer is not to abandon their current path, but to augment it with AI skills.
We are also seeing new roles emerging, such as prompt engineers, AI model evaluators, data annotators, AI data curators, and MLOps engineers. Through SSC NASSCOM’s research and initiatives, including micro-credentials available on platforms like FutureSkills Prime, learners can continuously upgrade their skills; many of these resources are accessible and free.
Jobs are not disappearing; they are evolving. The shift is from performing routine tasks to guiding and collaborating with intelligent systems, and that is where the future opportunities lie.









