
CBSE Skill Education (Kaushal Bodh) for Classes 6–8
April 10, 2026Artificial Intelligence & Computational Thinking for Classes 3–8
Introduction: Why CBSE Introduced AI‑CT
In April 2026, the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) officially launched a new national curriculum on Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Computational Thinking (CT) for Classes 3 to 8, beginning implementation from the 2026–27 academic session. [ai.goglobalways.com], [ncert.nic.in]
This initiative represents a major step in preparing Indian students for a technology‑driven future, while ensuring learning remains age‑appropriate, ethical, conceptual, and inclusive. The curriculum is fully aligned with:
- National Education Policy (NEP) 2020
- National Curriculum Framework for School Education (NCF‑SE) 2023
Unlike earlier “computer classes”, AI‑CT focuses on thinking first, technology second.

What Is AI‑CT (Artificial Intelligence & Computational Thinking)?
AI‑CT is a structured curriculum framework designed to help students:
- Think logically and systematically
- Solve real‑world problems step‑by‑step
- Understand how AI affects daily life
- Develop responsible and ethical digital behaviour
CBSE clearly states that Computational Thinking (CT) is the foundation, while Artificial Intelligence (AI) is the application. [pw.live]

What Is Computational Thinking (CT)?
Computational Thinking is not coding first.
It is a problem‑solving mindset that includes:
- Decomposition – breaking problems into parts
- Pattern Recognition – identifying similarities
- Abstraction – focusing on what matters
- Algorithmic Thinking – step‑by‑step solutions
These skills are useful across all subjects, not just computers. [takshasila...school.com]
Why CBSE Introduced AI‑CT at School Level
CBSE introduced AI‑CT to:
- Reduce rote learning
- Strengthen logical thinking early
- Build digital literacy safely
- Prepare students for future careers
- Demystify AI (not fear or glorify it)
According to CBSE, students should understand AI, not just use apps. [ai.goglobalways.com]
Is AI‑CT the Same as Skill Education or Kaushal Bodh?
No. AI‑CT is a separate curricular area
| Area | Kaushal Bodh | AI CT |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Vocational & Life Skills | Thinking & AI Literacy |
| Classes | 6–8 | 3–8 |
| Coding | Optional Tool | Core Concept |
| Work Type | Physical & Community Projects | Logic + Digital Projects |
| Books | NCERT Kaushal Bodh | CBSE AI CT Framework |
Curriculum Structure: Classes 3–8
CBSE has designed AI‑CT as a progressive, age‑appropriate curriculum.
Classes 3–5: Foundational Stage
Approach:
Embedded into existing subjects
Mostly “unplugged” (no screens required)
Key Focus Areas:
- Logical sequencing
- Sorting & classification
- Patterns & puzzles
- Step‑by‑step thinking
- Simple real‑life problem solving
Subjects Used For Integration:
- Mathematics
- Languages
- Environmental Studies / “The World Around Us”
Recommended Time: 50 hours per year [ncert.nic.in]
Classes 6–8: Middle Stage
Approach:
Dedicated AI‑CT learning
Interdisciplinary & project‑based
Key Components:
- Advanced Computational Thinking
- Introduction to Artificial Intelligence
- Data awareness
- Basic algorithms
- AI in daily life (maps, recommendations, voice assistants)
- Ethics: bias, privacy, fairness, digital footprints
Recommended Time:
100 hours across the stage [ncert.nic.in]
Does AI‑CT Mean Coding Is Compulsory?
Coding may be introduced, but gradually and conceptually
CBSE clearly emphasizes:
- Logic before syntax
- Concepts before programming languages
Coding is used to demonstrate thinking, not as rote instruction. [takshasila...school.com]

Teaching & Learning Methodology
AI‑CT follows NEP‑aligned pedagogy:
- Activity‑based learning
- Puzzles & games
- Group discussions
- Real‑world case studies
- Simple digital tools (where available)
The curriculum avoids platform dependency and promotes adaptability.
Assessment Pattern (No Exam Stress)
CBSE recommends competency‑based assessment, including:
- Projects & presentations
- Worksheets & puzzles
- Group activities
- Reflective journals
- Teacher observation
Who Will Teach AI‑CT?
CBSE clarifies that AI‑CT does not require specialist engineers.
Eligible teachers include:
- Mathematics teachers
- Science teachers
- Computer / IT teachers
- Trained skill educators
CBSE will support implementation through:
- Teacher handbooks
- Orientation programmes
Online resources. [pw.live]
Official CBSE Curriculum & Resource Links
AI‑CT Curriculum Framework (Official PDF)
https://cbseacademic.nic.in/web_material/CurriculumMain27/CTAI_Pri_2026-27.pdf
CBSE Announcement (April 2026)
Media Brief (Overview)
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, CBSE has announced nationwide implementation from 2026–27.
No. It focuses on thinking and concepts, not software training.
Sometimes, but much learning is unplugged and activity based.
No. They are separate but complementary programmes.
No traditional exams—only continuous assessment.
Why AI‑CT Matters for Students
AI‑CT helps students:
- Become confident problem‑solvers
- Understand AI responsibly
- Apply logic across subjects
- Prepare for future studies
- Develop ethical digital awareness
This is about creating AI‑ready thinkers, not just AI users.
Final Summary
AI‑CT is CBSE’s official curriculum for Computational Thinking and Artificial Intelligence for Classes 3–8, introduced from 2026–27.
It is separate from Kaushal Bodh and focuses on logic, problem‑solving, and ethical AI understanding.




