Masters’ Union, Rabbitt AI, AIWO Launch Classroom AI Program
This partnership aims to bridge the talent gap in India’s rapidly growing AI industry by moving beyond tool usage to tool creation, starting right at the classroom level.
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Gurgaon-based business and tech school Masters’ Union has tied up with London-headquartered enterprise AI firm Rabbitt AI and global nonprofit The AI World Organisation (AIWO) to embed real-world AI problem-solving into its undergraduate curriculum.
The collaboration aims to bridge India’s AI talent gap by shifting the focus from using AI tools to building them, starting in the classroom.
Beginning this semester, 50 students from the undergraduate program in Data Science and Artificial Intelligence will work on high-impact projects in multilingual AI, autonomous agents, and sector-specific AI tools for healthcare, agriculture, and HR.
These projects are co-designed by Rabbitt AI and guided by global experts from AIWO. The program will expand to other courses in the coming years.
“This is a deliberate shift from tool usage to tool creation, Swati Ganeti, Director of Undergraduate Programmes at Masters’ Union said. “It is no longer enough to be technically literate. Students need to be able to identify and solve complex problems using AI as a first-principles technology. This partnership is designed to train professionals who can design, test, and deploy intelligent systems, not just operate them.”
Delivered offline, the program combines in-class instruction with hands-on project execution. Students will also gain access to technical masterclasses, mentorship from CTOs, and applied project tracks, and receive a joint certificate from Masters’ Union and Rabbitt AI upon completion.
The partnership comes at a time when India faces a shortage of over 213,000 skilled AI professionals, according to a 2024 Nasscom report. While demand for AI products is booming, most talent entering the market is trained to operate off-the-shelf solutions rather than build and deploy foundational systems.
This initiative aims to address that deficit by introducing skills such as prompt engineering, agentic systems, Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG), and the ethical design of intelligent systems.
“India’s future AI leadership will come from students who can build from scratch, not those who merely adapt what already exists,” Harneet Singh, Founder and Chief AI Officer at Rabbitt AI, said. “Through this partnership, we are exposing undergraduates to the technical and contextual realities of enterprise-grade AI; whether it’s building an intelligent agent for a public health system or fine-tuning a multilingual LLM for agricultural extension services. The goal is to offer them a deep dive into the problems the world is already trying to solve.”
Earlier this year, Rabbitt AI and Masters’ Union co-hosted the AI World Power 30 Summit at the school’s Gurgaon campus, drawing over 200 leaders from the AI and HR ecosystems.