You open your NCERT textbook, read about Newton’s laws, and try to imagine a ball rolling down a ramp. But how fast is it really moving? What happens if you double the mass? You can’t see the answer in the book — but you can see it now, in real time, with a NCERT based simulation platform.

This isn’t just another online quiz or video. It’s a full AI-powered interactive lab where you change variables, run experiments, and get instant AI explanations — all aligned with your NCERT syllabus. Whether you're a student in Delhi, Mumbai, or Dubai, or a teacher in a rural school, these simulations work on any device, in any language, and adapt to your learning pace.

In 2026, the best way to learn isn’t by memorizing — it’s by doing, seeing, and questioning. And that’s exactly what a modern NCERT based simulation platform delivers.


Why This Matters: From Confusion to Clarity in One Click

Imagine you're a CBSE Class 10 student preparing for your board exams. You’ve read about photosynthesis in your NCERT Biology book, but the diagram doesn’t show how light intensity affects the rate. Or you’re in Class 12, struggling with electromagnetic induction — how does a changing magnetic field really create current?

Traditional labs are expensive, time-consuming, or unavailable. Digital alternatives like PhET are great, but they lack AI explanations, curriculum mapping, and teacher tracking. That’s where a NCERT based simulation platform comes in — it’s designed specifically for Indian students, with:

This isn’t just a tool — it’s a learning revolution that makes science and math feel real.


How a NCERT Based Simulation Platform Works: Step-by-Step

1. Choose Your Chapter, Pick Your Experiment

Every simulation is mapped to your NCERT textbook. For example:

You don’t need to search for external links or worry about alignment — the platform does it for you. Just select your class, subject, and chapter, and you’ll see a list of interactive labs ready to run.

2. Run the Simulation: Change Variables, See Results

Let’s take Ohm’s Law as an example. In a traditional lab, you’d connect a circuit and measure voltage and current. But what if you could:

That’s exactly what a NCERT based simulation platform lets you do. You’re not just observing — you’re experimenting.

Try This Simulation Free

Open the interactive simulation on anAIza School — no download, no signup needed.

Open Simulation →

Change the resistance and voltage — watch the current graph update in real time.