More than 33,000 students participated in Pakistan’s first nationwide National Skill Competency Test (NSCT) for IT graduates, marking a major step toward standardizing digital skills and improving workforce readiness in the country’s technology sector.
The initiative, introduced by the Government of Pakistan under the Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunication (MoITT), aims to bridge the gap between academic learning and industry requirements in the fast-growing IT sector.
According to official documents, the NSCT was developed to create a standardized competency-based assessment system for computing graduates, helping align university education with market demands and improving employer confidence in Pakistani IT talent.
The exam was conducted in April 2026 as a synchronized, computer-based test across the country using the Virtual University platform. A total of 40,784 students registered, while 33,038 candidates appeared, reflecting an attendance rate of 81 percent.
The test was held across 112 cities in 165 centers, with participation from more than 190 universities nationwide. It consisted of 100 questions to be completed in 120 minutes, conducted in four daily sessions.
The program was overseen by a multi-stakeholder steering committee formed in November 2025 on the Prime Minister’s directive. The committee included representatives from the Higher Education Commission (HEC), MoITT, Pakistan Software Export Board (PSEB), P@SHA, National Computing Education Accreditation Council (NCEAC), and the Virtual University.
Officials said the NSCT aims to improve industry-academia collaboration, strengthen curriculum design, and establish a verified national IT talent pool for employers.
The initiative is also expected to support long-term growth in Pakistan’s IT exports by enhancing graduate employability in advanced fields such as artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, cloud computing, and data science, while laying the foundation for performance-based evaluation of educational institutions.
