Jan - Feb
The year has begun with momentum. Several long-planned initiatives have moved from strategy to execution across states and sectors. In 2026, our focus is centred on the structural resilience of career education ecosystems, converting foundational planning into large-scale implementation alongside our government and industry stakeholders.
Here are BIG UPDATES from January and February to reflect this data-driven momentum, showcasing a strengthened resolve to engineer inclusive, evidence-based pathways for India’s youth.
Antarang’s strategy is to SHOW implementation methodology and success in 24 model districts across 5 states in India; BUILD the career readiness ecosystem along with state resources and then EMBED the model within the state high school ecosystem.
Our Model Districts show strong evidence for the need for Career Education.
1.
We Track and Report Post School Transitions: Student/ School-level / District level
We track how students transition post class 10 and 12 to understand the efficacy of career education on student future choices.
The year 2024-25 showed us that:
Post grade 10:
Nagaland – 18.7% highest NEEET post grade 10*
Yamunanagar – 0.6% least NEEET post grade 10*
2.
Contextualising the Career Education Curriculum: Nagaland sees On-ground Change post Intensive Rapid Testing
Personalisation, with a deep understanding of socio-cultural nuances, is key to effective career education across geographies. The Curriculum for Nagaland schools saw refreshed customisation with increased visual ease, local and hyperlocal contextualisation, specific supports to transition, highlighting gender diverse role models, and an inclusion of posters and parent material following intensive rapid testing.
These snapshots from the Student Workbooks say it all.
3.
Making Strategic Interventions in Personalized Guidance: The Goa Career Conclave | 30-31 January
To expose college students (undergraduate and post-graduate) and working youth to diverse education and career pathways and supporting informed decision-making, the Goa Career Conclave, organised by the Government of Goa through the Office of the Commissioner, Labour & Employment, Regional Employment Exchange, and Model Career Centre, served as a high-impact touchpoint for youth (ages 17–25).
Antarang Foundation set up an interactive career guidance exhibit showcasing as a conversation-led space focused on reflection and personalised guidance rather than information dissemination alone.
We held one-on-one career conversations, conducted aptitude assessments through Antarang’s chatbot, career readiness activities, and orientation to digital career guidance tools.
Antarang’s intervention highlighted the conclave’s objectives by strengthening access to personalised career guidance at scale.
4.
A Confluence of Pathways to Mobility: With SAMAGAM on 7th April, Mumbai.
We are excited to unveil Year 1 insights from the nation’s first longitudinal study on student journeys from classroom to careers at SAMAGAM 2026.
The confluence will bring together youth leaders, senior professionals from the sector, government and the philanthropy sector to engage with the findings of this pathbreaking study that traces the lives of young adults who have received career education since 2014.
5.
Data Meets Creativity with ArtxEvidence: 27th March, Goa
Art x Evidence is Antarang Foundation’s youth-first platform that uses art as a safe, inclusive, and engaging medium for young people to express their career challenges and aspirations.
Spanning critical transition points from post-10th and 12th grade decisions to early job experiences, the initiative responds to issues such as dropouts, skill mismatches, limited awareness of opportunities, challenges in the workplace and social pressures that often go unheard in formal settings.
By pairing data with creative expression, ArtxEvidence will shift the power dynamic of traditional panels and consultations, offering a space where youth voices are not debated but experienced. Mainstream media will amplify these creative voices, grounding them in hard evidence to bridge the gap between empathy and systemic change — sparking national dialogues that offer young adults concrete, constructive roadmaps for the future.
6.
Strengthening Maharashtra’s Career Guidance Ecosystem At Scale: Comprehensive Career Guidance Programme
Maharashtra took a significant step by launching a state-wide pilot for a Comprehensive Career Guidance Programme in secondary and higher secondary schools.
Under the SCERT Maharashtra–led initiative in partnership with UNICEF, Antarang Foundation trained a cadre of 72 state-level resource persons on the core principles of career guidance, including the administration and interpretation of psychometric assessments, facilitation using career cards, and delivery of one-on-one career counselling. These trained state-level resources will now function as master trainers, responsible for cascading career education to 500+ nominated career teachers in 506 schools across all districts of the state.
Through 503 Career Cards all available in Marathi, the NCERT’s TAMANNA Aptitude Test with a guide in Marathi, and capacity building of State-Level Resources, the pilot aims to strengthen meaningful career conversations for every student in pilot schools across all 36 districts. This cascade model is designed to institutionalise career guidance within schools and enable teachers to independently lead structured career guidance activities with students.
7.
Architecting a 3-Year Roadmap for Comprehensive Career Guidance: The Rajasthan State Consultation Workshop
Organised by the Rajasthan School Education Council and the Rajasthan State Council of Educational Research and Training, with technical support from UNICEF Rajasthan and Antarang Foundation, 30 January 2026 was a milestone with a one-day State-Level Consultation Workshop on Comprehensive Career Guidance in Jaipur.
Focused on embedding career guidance as a core component of the education system, the workshop adopted a multi-stakeholder, participatory approach, systematically recording perspectives of students, career teachers, State Resource Group members, civil society organisations, and representatives from key government departments beyond school education, including higher education, social justice, women and child development, and skill development.
Prachi Venkataramanan, Sector Expert (Curriculum & Training) moderated the workshop, and Swati Mohan, Joint Executive Director, Antarang Foundation consolidated the outcomes: An actionable three-year roadmap aligned with National Education Policy 2020, aimed at strengthening structures, building capacity, and ensuring that every student is supported to make informed, aspirational career decisions.
8.
Aligning Systems for Student Transitions: A High-level Joint Consultation at the Directorate of School Education, Nagaland
Antarang’s focus across states has been to consolidate synergies and priorities of all state bodies that work with the secondary age population. Bringing together key stakeholders from the Directorate of School Education, Nagaland, the State Council of Educational Research and Training, Nagaland, Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, the Nagaland Board of School Education, and the Nagaland Secretariat, alongside Antarang Foundation and Youthnet, a high-level joint consultation was convened at the Directorate of School Education on 11th February.
Antarang presented critical implementation data and progress benchmarks from the ongoing career education programme, facilitating a reflective session on inter-departmental convergence. The discussion focused on synchronizing system-wide alignment towards a strategic roadmap, specifically addressing student aspirations and the institutionalization of transition tracking.
Key outcomes emphasized strengthening parental engagement through Parent Teacher Meetings and developing robust industry linkages to ensure sustainable career pathways for youth across the state.
9.
Advancing Career Guidance on a National Level: Viksit Bharat Young Leaders Dialogue 2026 with UNICEF’s YuWaah
In an impactful multi-stakeholder collaboration, UNICEF YuWaah, in partnership with Antarang Foundation, set up a Career Guidance and Counselling stall at the Viksit Bharat Young Leaders Dialogue held at Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi, from 9–12 January, under the aegis of the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports.
Over four days, the stall engaged 250+ youth (ages 15–25+) from 16+ states across India. Through a graduated engagement model—including aspiration mapping, case-based career exploration, aptitude assessments, and ~150 instances of 1:1 counselling—the stall provided a safe, inclusive space for youth to reflect on aspirations, explore career pathways, and seek personalised guidance on post-school transitions. The national education budget reflects the government’s commitment to personalised career education as a tool to accelerate education to employment pathways.
10.
Scaling Vocational Integration and the National Education Policy 2020: Rajasthan Budget Unlock
In a significant move toward institutionalizing the National Education Policy 2020, the Rajasthan State Government announced a ₹1,000 crore pooled budget dedicated to vocational education and career guidance.
A key component of this fiscal commitment includes an approved outlay of ₹51.10 crore to expand vocational education from the existing 4,019 schools to an additional 500 institutions in the upcoming academic session.
By unlocking these specific resources, the state is strengthening the structural alignment between secondary education and workforce readiness. These provisions represent a data-backed shift toward cross-departmental integration, ensuring that school-to-work pathways are both scalable and sustainably funded to meet the evolving aspirations of Rajasthan’s youth.
P.S. It was heartening to see the recent national education budget carve out a sizable investment for the education-to-employability vertical. With India’s demographic dividend and rising need for work with dignity and mobility, we welcome this focus from the central government.
11.
Integrating Strategic Talent: Because no work on the ground gets done without a robust backbone of support!
To support our expanding operational footprint, Antarang has integrated six new team members since January across decentralized state units and central support functions.
By embedding talent within state teams, we are driving local autonomy and on-ground responsiveness, while simultaneously strengthening our Research & Learning and Fundraising verticals.
12.
Building Leadership: Antarang’s Manager Accelerator Program sees a Second Round of Building Purposeful Leaders
February marked the second iteration of our Manager Accelerator Program (MAP), a specialized three-day residency for the Training & Quality team focused on purposeful leadership and strategic partnerships. As the primary support system for our frontline facilitators, the professional development of this cohort is a critical lever for institutional success.
By enhancing their capacity to lead with precision and empathy, Antarang is directly optimizing classroom delivery standards, ensuring that high-quality career education translates into improved well being and long-term outcomes for every student.
13.
Building Institutional Capacity as a Catalyst for Impact: @The India Fundraising Conference 2026, 5-6 February, New Delhi
In a panel discussion bringing together nonprofit leaders and funders to explore a powerful idea: strong organisations make great programs possible, Archana Chandra, Board Member and Amit Chandra, Co-founder, A.T.E. Chandra Foundation, Bikkrama Daulet Singh, Operating Partner, The Convergence Foundation, Priya Agrawal, Founder, Antarang Foundation and Viren Rasquinha, CEO, OGQ examined the critical nexus between organizational resilience and programmatic excellence at the 2026 India Fundraising Conference.
The panel shifted the focus from traditional project-based funding toward the necessity of intentional investment in “backbone” infrastructure—specifically talent, fundraising, and operational systems. By analyzing growth-stage specific investments, the discussion underscored that institutional strength is not an administrative overhead but a primary driver of sustainable scale.
For Antarang, this dialogue reinforces our commitment to building a robust, data-informed internal architecture that can reliably support complex school-to-work transitions at a national level- towards collective Capacity, Capital and Courage.
14.
Inclusivity is an everyday practice. Not a one-time initiative: The Antarang Session at HerKey
In an engaging virtual Session by HerKey on 13th January, attended by 70 women from across sectors and careers, our Director – Talent, Culture and Administration, Rapti Mukherjee, and Lead – Model Districts Implementation, Akshay Jha, shared real-world insights on building environments where young women feel safe, supported, and empowered to grow.
HerKey is one of India’s largest platforms to unlock women’s work-life aspirations. The session aptly captioned “Creating Inclusive Spaces for Young Women and Girls – Fostering environments where every voice is valued” saw a high level of engagement from the 70+ attendees, underscoring the need for authentic conversations, as these help all understand what inclusion in practice really looks like in the spaces we are part of.
15.
When an Unexpected Airport Reunion became a Reminder of Why Career Education in High School Matters!
Aashish Pandey, Antarang Alumni, Head of Agent Partnerships & Customer Success, Houzeo says: “Meeting Priya ma’am was one of those moments that quietly remind you where it all began. As an alumnus and former team member of Antarang Foundation, I can say with deep gratitude that this organization didn’t just guide me—it helped build the very foundation on which my career stands today.
At a time when career awareness, aspiration-building, and structured pathways felt distant for many of us, Antarang stepped in with belief, mentorship, and direction.
The impact of that support continues to shape my professional journey even now. “It was heartwarming to reconnect, share a quick conversation, and realize how many lives continue to be transformed through this work. Grateful to always
Aashish Pandey, Antarang Alumni, Head of Agent Partnerships & Customer Success, Houzeo says: “Meeting Priya ma’am was one of those moments that quietly remind you where it all began. As an alumnus and former team member of Antarang Foundation, I can say with deep gratitude that this organization didn’t just guide me—it helped build the very foundation on which my career stands today.
At a time when career awareness, aspiration-building, and structured pathways felt distant for many of us, Antarang stepped in with belief, mentorship, and direction.
The impact of that support continues to shape my professional journey even now. “It was heartwarming to reconnect, share a quick conversation, and realize how many lives continue to be transformed through this work. Grateful to always