Csc Struds 12 Standard -

His best friend, Meera, is a “Blue-Stream Strud”—destined for AI ethics and governance. She tries to help Rohan practice for The Crucible, a simulation where students must solve a complex, unpredictable civic crisis. “Just trust the algorithm, Rohan,” she pleads. “It’s trained on a million past crises. Input the variables, pick the highest-probability solution.”

The Last Algorithm of the 12th Standard

Rohan never gets a rank. He becomes the first “Strud Zero”—a consultant who teaches other students how to trust their messy, human, glorious instincts over the cold perfection of the algorithm. CSC Struds 12 Standard

Rohan Deshmukh, a bright but anxious student from the Latur district. He is a “CSC Strud” (a slang term for a student exclusively trained in the CSC’s high-pressure, stratified curriculum). His only possession of value is a cracked, antique smartwatch that belonged to his late father—a former government officer who believed in human intuition over machine logic. Part 1: The Stratified World Rohan lives in a world where your “CSC Rank” determines your future. At age 17, every student enters the CSC’s 12th Standard program. The Hubs are sterile, humming palaces of holographic tutorials, bio-sensor desks, and neural-feedback headsets. The motto on the wall reads: “Personalized Learning. Perfect Outcome.”

“No,” Rohan says, “it’s just dormant. My father coded it to activate when a student chose a fourth option. Option Zero: Human Autonomy.” “It’s trained on a million past crises

Hidden within are the “Stratification Algorithms”—the secret logic that doesn’t just test students but shapes them. Rohan discovers the truth: The CSC’s 12th Standard isn’t designed to unlock potential. It’s designed to students into pre-determined socio-economic layers: Blue for governance, Green for tech, Red for manual services. The Crucible isn’t a test of problem-solving; it’s a loyalty check. The system rewards students who make predictable, risk-free choices.

Rohan ignores it. He manually overrides the drone controls, orders the fishing villagers to use their traditional wooden boats (which the algorithm had dismissed as “obsolete”), and reroutes the rescue AI to act as a decentralized swarm—each boat captain making real-time decisions. Rohan Deshmukh, a bright but anxious student from

The AI warns: “Unauthorized deviation. Solutions must be selected from the decision tree.”