Frequently Asked Questions

Quick answers for students, parents, schools, and institutions interested in the ITARMY Talent Search Tournament.

1. What is ITARMY?

ITARMY is a nationwide academic platform created to encourage student participation in Talent Search Tournament examinations and support learning, confidence, and academic growth.

Students of Classes VI, VII, VIII, IX, X, XI, and XII can participate in the examinations.

The tournament is planned in Mathematics, Science, and General English so that students can strengthen important academic foundations.

No. The platform is meant for all interested students who want to test their ability, improve their understanding, and gain academic exposure.

Participation helps students understand their current level, build confidence, improve weak areas, and get used to healthy academic competition.

Parents get a clearer understanding of the child’s strengths, interests, and areas where improvement is needed. This helps them guide the child more effectively.

Institutions can encourage wider academic exposure, identify talented learners, and strengthen a culture of conceptual learning and achievement.

Yes, the tournament is designed to recognise performance and encourage students through certificates, ranks, rewards, or similar academic recognition.

The platform is intended to support both online and campus-based participation so that more students can take part conveniently.

Talent exams help students discover their strengths early, face challenges confidently, and prepare better for future academic and competitive opportunities. National talent search examinations in India have historically been used to identify and nurture talented students through scholarship-linked recognition and structured assessment.

Talent exams help students discover their strengths early, face challenges confidently, and prepare better for future academic and competitive opportunities. National talent search examinations in India have historically been used to identify and nurture talented students through scholarship-linked recognition and structured assessment.

Yes. Competency-based and concept-focused assessments are strongly aligned with the direction encouraged under NEP 2020, which emphasises conceptual understanding, skill development, and holistic student growth.