Delhi to modernise 75 CM SHRI schools with AI, smart classrooms, green campuses
Press Trust of India | February 12, 2026 | 09:02 AM IST | 2 mins read
Admissions from Class 6 onwards will be based on an aptitude test to identify talented students.
NEW DELHI: The Delhi government will upgrade 75 CM SHRI schools with artificial intelligence-enabled learning, smart boards, projectors and other advanced facilities, aiming to build future-ready institutions aligned with global education standards.
The schools will be developed as specialised institutions in line with the National Education Policy 2020 and the National Curriculum Framework for School Education 2023, an official said, adding that they will focus on skill-based and competency-driven education to prepare students for emerging global demands.
The CM SHRI schools will promote futuristic learning through AI-powered personalised learning hubs, digital integration and experiential teaching methods. A flexible assessment system aimed at reducing exam stress will also be introduced, the official said.
According to the official, the campuses will feature smart classrooms equipped with augmented and virtual reality tools, AI-enabled libraries, robotics labs and biometric attendance systems. The schools are also planned as green campuses, with solar energy use and zero-waste practices.
Also read 13,076 PM SHRI schools established in 3 years; highest in Uttar Pradesh: Education ministry
The institutions will either start from the nursery level or from Class 6. Admissions from Class 6 onwards will be based on an aptitude test to identify talented students, the official said. Half of the seats will be reserved for students from government and government-aided schools, including those run by the Directorate of Education (DoE), MCD, NDMC, Kendriya Vidyalayas and Navodaya Vidyalayas.
Students belonging to SC, ST, OBC (non-creamy layer) categories and children with special needs will be given a five per cent relaxation in the eligibility criteria . Last year, the lieutenant governor notified the establishment of these schools as "specified category" institutions under the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009.
The proposal was vetted by the law, planning and finance departments and approved by the Delhi Cabinet in May before being sent to the L-G. With the Delhi Board of School Education being phased out, these schools will be affiliated with the Central Board of Secondary Education, according to the DoE notification.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]UP Budget 2026-27: Vocational education funds up 88%; 14 new medical colleges; school outlay highest
UP Budget 2026-27 Highlights: Uttar Pradesh govt announces new cancer institute in Lucknow, mental health policy in higher education, Kasturba Gandhi Schools in every block, AI labs in ITIs
Sheena Sachdeva | 2 mins readFeatured News
]- Education Loan: PM-USP scholarships up 31.6% nationally, but J-K and Ladakh see 10.9% drop in 5 years
- Operation Kayakalp: ‘Jarjar’ schools in UP a blind spot – with crumbling buildings and children left behind
- Protest as ‘law and order issues’: Students note pattern of universities filing FIRs to tackle ‘disagreements’
- Maharashtra Budget: Key scholarship scheme loses 82% funds; cuts across schemes for poor students in higher ed
- Karnataka Education Budget 2026-27: No social media for under-16, AI tutors for 12 lakh, IIT-level university
- ‘Mini Sikkim’: This CM Shri school bets on merit, mountains, and morning yoga to build future leaders
- JEE Advanced 2026: Adaptive test questions ready; IIT Kanpur to pilot this year on own students first
- From CBSE to IB Board: DPS International principal on why parents want a curriculum beyond rote learning
- From carpentry labs to language classes, NEP promises big but are Indian schools ready to deliver?
- The KGBV Plight: How underpaid teachers, slashed budgets, and empty seats are plaguing govt’s flagship scheme