News update
  • Energy prices surge to highest in 4 years as conflict spreads     |     
  • 16 DIGs Among 17 Police Officials Sent on Retirement     |     
  • Remittance Hits $3.12b in April, Continues Uptrend     |     
  • Exports Jump 33% in April, Ending Months of Decline     |     
  • Over 1.23cr sacrificial animals ready for Qurbani: Minister     |     

Shikho launches free Bangla AI course for students, others

Greenwatch Desk Technology 2026-05-03, 9:46pm

images78-d0401e8968e2ee11f733476b00de15471777823239.jpg




Shikho has launched “Think AI,” a free Bangla-language course designed to give students, teachers and workers a foundational understanding of artificial intelligence.


The course, developed in collaboration with LightCastle Partners and supported by Meta, is available on Shikho’s learning platform, said a media statement.

It consists of four lessons covering AI fundamentals, how generative tools work, the ethics of responsible use, and practical pathways for upskilling.

It requires no prior technical background and is aimed at secondary and university students, educators, freelancers and young professionals across Bangladesh.

The event recently held at a city hotel in Dhaka, drew more than 60 stakeholders from the Ministry of Education, the Ministry of Posts, Telecommunications, and Information Technology, the private sector, and development partners.

Discussions at the event centered on three objectives: distributing the course through Bangladesh's existing educational infrastructure, opening cross-sector dialogue on AI literacy and digital skills, and establishing a replicable model for public-private collaboration in digital skilling.

Shahir Chowdhury, Founder and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Shikho, framed AI as a civilizational shift and a defining opportunity for Bangladesh. "For the first time in modern history, geography doesn't have to dictate destiny," he said.

Mahdi Amin, Adviser to the Prime Minister's Office (Education), said the government is moving to digitise the country's curriculum and standardise the quality of teaching across geographies, with AI as a core enabler, reports UNB.

 "We are going to convert our curriculum to a digital curriculum. The finest teachers in Dhaka, the content they get access to, will have the same content in the remote villages," he said.

"For our digital classroom and One Teacher One Tab programmes, AI will play an instrumental role."

Rehan Asif Asad,Adviser to the Prime Minister's Office (ICT), said the government's first priority is laying the connectivity and data infrastructure that will allow AI to work at national scale. "If I don't have connectivity, I have nothing. For AI to work, it is absolutely critical to have the data," he said.

“With that infrastructure in place, for the first time, the barrier is almost blurring between Rangpur and Palo Alto."

The panel discussion, which brought together the senior government advisers and Meta's regional public policy leadership, was moderated by Bijon Islam, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of LightCastle Partners.