How AI is changing higher education admissions in India: Why parents now prioritise future-ready universities

As AI and rapidly evolving industries reshape higher education, parents are beginning to evaluate institutions beyond rankings and legacy. Future-readiness, curriculum relevance, faculty preparedness, and modern infrastructure are emerging as crit...

ET Online
For years, higher education in India operated on a familiar promise. A recognised name, a strong campus, and a respectable placement record were often enough to reassure families making one of the most important financial and emotional decisions of their lives.

That equation is beginning to change. Parents in 2026 are evaluating institutions through a far more future-conscious lens. The concern is no longer limited to where students will study. Increasingly, it is whether the institution itself is evolving fast enough for a rapidly changing world.

The rise of AI, automation, and digitally transformed industries has accelerated a broader shift in perception across higher education. Families are becoming more aware that traditional academic reputation alone may not guarantee long-term relevance. What matters now is whether institutions are actively adapting their curriculum, faculty capabilities, and infrastructure to reflect the realities students will enter after graduation. This has quietly created a new admissions dynamic.


Institutions are no longer competing only on rankings or legacy. They are competing on visible readiness.

Parents today are asking sharper questions. Is the curriculum aligned with emerging industries? Are faculty equipped to teach in technology-enabled learning environments? Does the campus infrastructure support modern forms of learning, research, and experimentation? More importantly, can institutions demonstrate that transformation is actually taking place beyond marketing narratives?

Across the sector, this growing demand for institutional transparency is driving interest in structured readiness frameworks and independent evaluation models. Initiatives such as ET AI-Ready are beginning to enter that conversation by assessing institutions across areas like curriculum readiness, faculty preparedness, and infrastructure capability, helping universities benchmark how prepared they are for an AI-shaped academic landscape.
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The significance of such frameworks extends beyond technology adoption. They represent something deeper: institutional credibility in a period of educational transition.

For universities and colleges, this moment is becoming increasingly strategic. India’s higher education market is more competitive than ever, with institutions fighting not only for rankings, but for relevance in the minds of students and parents. In that environment, the perception of being future-ready can influence admissions outcomes as strongly as conventional reputation markers once did.

The institutions likely to stand out over the next decade may not necessarily be those with the longest legacy, but those able to communicate adaptability with clarity and confidence. For a new generation of families, the real question is no longer whether a university has existed for decades. It is whether it is prepared for the decades ahead.

As institutions across India begin re-evaluating how they position themselves in this new admissions era, platforms such as ET AI-Ready are expected to play an increasingly important role in helping universities understand, assess, and demonstrate their readiness for the future of higher education.
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