The move away from manual, paper-heavy processes toward fully digital academic workflows is becoming a central pillar of campus modernisation. Leading institutions such as XLRI, Manipal Academy of Higher Education, and the JIS Group (45,000+ learners) are adopting D2L’s Brightspace platform to digitise assessments, streamline academic delivery, support blended learning models, and enhance faculty-student engagement.
Vivek Iyer, MD, D2L India, speaks exclusively to Rajneesh De, Group Editor, APAC Media & CXO Media, on how platforms like Brightspace are shaping the next phase of higher education in India, with more universities now prioritising digital academic processes.
How are Indian universities progressing in their transition toward paperless, digitally enabled learning ecosystems under NEP 2020?
Indian universities are making commendable strides in embracing digital-first ecosystems in line with NEP 2020. We are seeing institutions move beyond pilot projects to full-scale adoption of paperless workflows, digital assessments, and online learning platforms.
The emphasis on flexibility, personalisation, and outcome-based education is driving universities to invest in technology that supports blended and hybrid learning models. While the pace varies across institutions, the overall trajectory is clear that India’s higher education sector is rapidly modernising to meet the vision of NEP 2020.
What key challenges do institutions face when shifting from manual, paper-heavy academic processes to fully digital academic workflows?
While the commitment is high, the transition to fully digital workflows presents several strategic and operational challenges. For example, Change Management. The biggest hurdle is often cultural and pedagogical change. Faculty, accustomed to manual, paper-based processes, require dedicated training and support not just on how to use a new system, but how to integrate digital pedagogy effectively to create inspiring, engaging experiences for their learners.
Secondly, there is a problem of siloed legacy systems. Many Higher Education Institutions ( HEIs ) operate with fragmented, decades-old administrative systems. Achieving a truly fully digital workflow means seamlessly integrating the LMS with the existing Student Information System (SIS) and Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP). This requires open, flexible platforms to manage complex data migration and integration.
Lastly, the Digital Divide. We must be acutely aware of infrastructure disparities. While D2L Brightspace is optimised for mobile-first, low-bandwidth use, institutions must still strategize ensuring every student has reliable access. Our commitment to accessibility and reliability helps mitigate this, but it requires strategic policy support.
How is D2L’s Brightspace platform helping universities digitise assessments, streamline academic delivery, and enhance learner engagement?
Brightspace is the engine that drives this digital transformation, designed from the ground up to support modern, outcome-based learning methodologies at scale:
- Digitising Assessment and Driving Outcomes: D2L Brightspace supports Outcome-Based Education (OBE). Assessments, quizzes, and assignments are directly mapped to specific Course and Program Outcomes (COs/POs). This provides administrators and faculty with unprecedented, real-time data on student competency and learning gaps, allowing for targeted intervention and evidence-based curriculum adjustments.
- Streamlining Academic Delivery: Brightspace simplifies the operational complexity of blended and online programs. Tools like D2L Intelligent Agents and automated release conditions personalise learning pathways and allow faculty to spend less time on administration and more time on high-value interactions like mentorship and course design.
- Enhancing Learner Engagement: We deliver an intuitive, mobile-first experience via the Brightspace Pulse app. Features like interactive content creation tools (Creator+), integrated video, and gamification elements ensure the learning experience is engaging, fun, and relevant to today’s digital-native student, driving higher retention and completion rates.
Can you share concrete examples of impact, such as improved efficiency, faculty adoption, or student outcomes, from institutions like XLRI, MAHE, or JIS Group?
Brightspace has been adopted by institutions such as Manipal Academy of Higher Education (MAHE), SRM Online and Manipal University Jaipur to support large-scale blended and online programs. For example, SRM has reported a 3x increase in Assessment and Submission rates. Manipal University Jaipur has reduced their 40% faculty administrative workload by 40%. This freed-up time can now be used by faculty for higher-order student engagement work.
MUJ Jaipur online used Brightspace as the backbone of its online programs and scaled from zero to about 85,000 learners in five years while maintaining stable access across thousands of towns and multiple nationalities. We continue to work with several other universities in India and deliver such measurable improvements across their teaching and learning operations.
What makes Brightspace particularly aligned with UGC guidelines and India’s outcome-based education priorities?
D2L Brightspace aligns perfectly with the core regulatory and educational shifts being driven by the UGC and the NEP. There are 25 parameters UGC has laid for a non-SWAYAM LMS to comply with. D2L Brightspace meets all 25 requirements. This has been instrumental in the success D2L has enjoyed in the online space in India.
How does D2L ensure data security, privacy, and scalability for institutions managing thousands of learners on digital platforms?
We take our responsibility to protect the confidentiality, availability and integrity of institutional data seriously, which is why we have the most comprehensive security and privacy certifications in the industry. Brightspace is delivered as an enterprise-grade cloud platform with security features such as role-based access control, authentication integrations, and comprehensive logging designed to protect institutional and learner data at scale. Its architecture has supported deployments running tens of thousands of concurrent learners across many geographies, with
Indian partners highlight reliability, availability, and the ability to serve large online cohorts without compromising performance or privacy.
What is D2L’s vision for the next phase of digital transformation in India’s higher education sector over the next 3–5 years?
Our vision is centred on moving from digital adoption to digital intelligence and relevance to transform the learning experience. We plan to accomplish that with AI-powered personalisation at scale. We will be rolling out further advanced capabilities of D2L Lumi, our AI-native tool. This will empower institutions to deploy a cognitive coach for every learner, providing AI-assisted content creation, personalised study recommendations, and automated feedback, drastically improving student success and freeing faculty to focus on mentorship and deep discussion.
We also recognise that India is gradually moving towards a skills-first ecosystem. The focus will shift strongly toward demonstrating competencies and skills. We aim to support a seamless transition to micro-credentials, stackable programs, and continuous upskilling that directly addresses the workforce needs of a rapidly evolving India, ensuring every graduate is future-ready and employable.
Lastly, we will continue to empower leaders with high-impact, actionable data. This is about connecting administrative data with learning data to give VCs and administrators the strategic insights needed to enhance academic quality, improve retention, and secure better accreditation and rankings.
There is still a lack of uniformity in terms of curricula, setting, assessment, etc. How can the digitisation process exactly work in such a heterogeneous environment?
The heterogeneity of the Indian education landscape is precisely why a flexible, robust, enterprise LMS is essential. Our platform is built to thrive in this diverse environment.
- Standardising the measurement, not the curriculum: The D2L approach is to provide a standardised, high-quality framework for learning delivery and outcomes measurement. While a physics course in one state may cover a different topic sequence than a college in another, Brightspace enables both to map their respective curricula to the common program outcomes (POs) mandated by the institution or regulator. The platform homogenises the reporting on quality and achievement, not the academic content itself.
- Architectural flexibility: Brightspace is designed to support every instructional model, from fully face-to-face with minimal digital components, blended, to fully online. This flexibility allows an entire university system, with diverse colleges and varying digital maturity, to operate on a single, shared platform, promoting best practice sharing while respecting institutional autonomy and local curricula.
- Empowering the educator: By simplifying administrative tasks through automation, we free up faculty time. The time saved is reinvested in localised curriculum design and pedagogical innovation. The platform becomes a tool that elevates the best of local teaching expertise, rather than trying to enforce a one-size-fits-all model.
In essence, Brightspace acts as a uniform standard for quality and transparency, while providing the flexibility necessary for institutions to serve their unique regional and pedagogical needs.