MP Engineering College to Offer BTech Civil in Hindi

- Madhya Pradesh engineering college introduces Hindi-medium BTech Civil programme from 2026–27 academic session successfully.
- Students completing entire course in Hindi medium will receive ₹2 lakh government incentive.
- AICTE-approved engineering textbooks translated into Hindi for improving technical education accessibility across rural communities.
A major shift in technical education is set to begin in Madhya Pradesh as a government engineering college prepares to introduce a BTech Civil Engineering programme in Hindi from the 2026–27 academic sessions. The initiative is designed to help students who come from Hindi-speaking rural areas overcome English language obstacles that prevent them from studying engineering.
Shri Govindram Seksaria Institute of Technology and Science (SGSITS), Indore, one of central India’s prominent engineering institutions, will offer the four-year civil engineering programme entirely in Hindi. The National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 establishes goals which this initiative supports through its promotion of higher education in both regional languages and native languages to enhance access for students.
The institute spent its past four years for preparing the transition through translating AICTE-approved engineering textbooks into Hindi and training faculty members in bilingual teaching techniques. The organization conducted workshops to assist teachers in teaching complex engineering concepts through their native Hindi language while maintaining essential technical terms in English.
Also read: Odisha Launches ShaktiShree App, NEP Internship Plan
The institute currently offers 90 seats for Civil Engineering in English medium. The Hindi-medium programme now has 30 new seats which bring the total student capacity to 120. The state government plans to provide a ₹2 lakh incentive to students who complete their studies in Hindi until their final academic year as a way to boost admissions.
The Madhya Pradesh Technical Education Minister Inder Singh Parmar described the initiative as a historic step which enables talented students from all educational and social backgrounds to receive their rightful educational opportunities. The program will especially help academically strong rural students who face difficulties studying engineering because of their language barriers.
Experts also indicate that civil engineering requires civil engineers to perform extensive field research while they establish connections with nearby communities. The state government has already tested Hindi-medium medical education programs and its latest initiative represents a wider effort to introduce regional-language instruction in professional courses.