With the help of GenAI, Coursera delivers 4,000 Hindi courses.
With the aid of generative artificial intelligence, US-based startup Coursera has translated 4000 courses into Hindi to support their further expansion in the rapidly expanding field of online education. This will provide outstanding courses like DeepLearning’s Generative AI for Everyone to the Hindi-speaking audience. Among these are IBM’s What is Data Science? Yale University’s The Science of Well-Being, University of Michigan’s Programming for Everyone, and AI.
In 2012, Coursera established its headquarters in India and began providing online courses from some of the best colleges in the world.
With the aid of generative artificial intelligence, US-based startup Coursera has translated 4000 courses into Hindi to support their further expansion in the rapidly expanding field of online education. This will provide outstanding courses like DeepLearning’s Generative AI for Everyone to the Hindi-speaking audience. Among these are IBM’s What is Data Science? Yale University’s The Science of Well-Being, University of Michigan’s Programming for Everyone, and AI.
In 2012, Coursera established its headquarters in India and began providing online courses from some of the best colleges in the world.
According to Coursera, more than 40 courses from prestigious universities in the nation, like Trading Basics from Indian School of Business (ISB), Leadership Skills from IIM Ahmedabad, and Introduction to Programming from BITS Pilani, will also be translated into 18 languages, including French, Spanish, German, and Thai.
India now has more students enrolled in courses than the US. According to Jeff Maggioncalda, CEO of Coursera, this is a pandemic effect. “India has had enormous growth during the pandemic, with 18.6 million new learners registering, more than a million more than the US (17.1 million). This is because more than any other nation, Indians are eager to advance their skills to improve their employment opportunities. No one had predicted that the idea of working from home would be so popular before the epidemic. During the lockdown, Indians worked and improved their skills online, he claimed.