Gandhinagar is no longer just an administrative town — it has become one of Gujarat's most globally facing workplaces, and in every one of those workplaces spoken English is the language of advancement. GIFT City, India's flagship International Financial Services Centre on the city's edge, runs entirely in English: the analysts, compliance officers and relationship managers there deal with global banks and overseas clients every day. The InfoCity IT park hosts large technology employers whose teams join cross-border stand-ups, client calls and technical presentations in English. Even in the State Secretariat, senior administrative and liaison roles increasingly need fluent spoken English to coordinate with central ministries and host investment delegations, while the pharmaceutical units along the Gandhinagar–Ahmedabad corridor run regulated, export-facing operations. For a graduate from a Gujarati- or Hindi-medium school, the written grammar is usually solid — what holds them back is the confidence to speak without first translating in their head.
EEC has been part of Gujarat's education story since July 15, 1997, and although we do not run a physical branch in Gandhinagar, our Spoken English course reaches Gandhinagar students fully through the Online Live batch on Zoom — taught by the same EEC faculty, with the same curriculum and the same live speaking practice as our classroom centres. The course uses the original Cambridge Interchange Level 1 book — the communicative-English curriculum trusted by learners worldwide — across three months of 2-hour classes, Monday to Saturday. Each session pairs an Interchange lesson and real speaking practice with a second hour of basic grammar explained in Hindi and Gujarati, so a complete beginner is supported at every step. The fee is ₹7,500, and your original Cambridge book is delivered free to your door anywhere in Gandhinagar.
Gandhinagar's academic profile makes this especially relevant. The city's knowledge corridor — institutions such as IIT Gandhinagar, Pandit Deendayal Energy University, Gujarat National Law University, NID and NFSU — operates almost entirely in English, yet many students arrive from regional-medium schools across North Gujarat and hit a steep transition. EEC's Spoken English course closes that gap by training learners to think and speak directly in English rather than translate. By the end, students handle daily conversation, college presentations, campus-placement group discussions, government-job and bank interview rounds, and the unscripted questions of a visa interview with composure. You receive an EEC completion certificate — but the lasting outcome is fluency, and since Spoken English is the foundation EEC builds before IELTS, PTE, or TOEFL, that fluency carries straight into whatever you pursue next.