May 19, 2022
1 min read

More edtech firms shift focus

Unacademy said it will soon conduct a national scholarship admission test for batch enrollments where rankers can win scholarships….reports Asian Lite News

As online education space shrinks with India reopening amid the ‘hybrid normal’, learning platform Unacademy on Wednesday announced its foray into opening physical tuition centres across the country, following BYJU’s footsteps.

The Unacademy centres will facilitate the offline classes in the NEET UG, IT JEE and Foundation (9-12) course categories.

The first Unacademy centre will be operational in Kota by next month, followed by similar touchpoints in Jaipur, Bengaluru, Chandigarh, Ahmedabad, Patna, Pune and Delhi, the company said in a statement.

“With ‘Unacademy Centres’ we will bring the best of Unacademy — India’s top Educators, best-in-class technology and product, and state-of-the-art infrastructure — for our learners,” said Gaurav Munjal, Co-Founder and CEO, Unacademy Group.

The platform aims to enroll up to 15,000 learners in the first batch across centres.

Unacademy said it will soon conduct a national scholarship admission test for batch enrollments where rankers can win scholarships.

The move comes at a time when online education providers are looking to go offline as the edtech industry is struggling to sustain their business model.

After post-Covid tremors at Unacademy and BYJU’s-owned WhiteHat Jr, another edtech major Vedantu recently laid off nearly 200 employees.

Edtech platforms are seeing a significant dip in the demand for online learning and some of such firms have either shut shops or fired employees in recent days.

Unacademy recently laid off nearly 600 employees, contractual workers and educators — about 10 per cent of its 6,000-strong workforce across the group.

WhiteHat Jr has also shut its schools division that last year targeted to take its flagship coding curriculum to 10 lakh school students by the next academic year.

In a nightmare for nearly 1,000 employees, homegrown edtech startup Lido Learning which is backed by top entrepreneur Ronnie Screwvala, shut operations in February this year.

ALSO READ: India will be the fastest growing economy: UN

Previous Story

Moody’s avers optimism over India’s economy

Next Story

‘Gaganyaan showcasing India’s ambitious space expedition

Latest from India News

Fiji PM Rabuka Begins First India Visit

The visit comes just weeks after India and Fiji held the 6th round of Foreign Office Consultations (FOC) in Suva, Fiji, in July 2025….reports Asian Lite News Fiji’s Prime Minister Sitiveni Ligamamada

Modi all set for Japan, China visits

By travelling to both Tokyo and Tianjin within the span of a week, Modi is set to balance strategic partnerships with Japan and cautious engagement with China – two relationships that will

Modi, Macron Hold Talks on Ukraine, West Asia

During the talks, Macron shared assessment on the recent meetings held between the leaders of the Europe, US and Ukraine in Washington….reports Asian Lite News Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke by phone
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Vedantu buys majority stake in Deeksha

Deeksha is one of the leading K-12 test preparation players

Falling rupee dampens foreign education dreams

There are long delays in getting student visas while at