Built by someone who's actually doing it.
I'm a MERN Stack Developer and EdTech founder. LearnSynaptic isn't a planned launch — it's already running. 5+ batches, 200+ students, and I still take every class myself.
I'm Pratik Sabale — a full-stack developer based in Pune with 3–4 years of experience building real products and training developers who wanted to build real products too.
I started LearnSynaptic because I kept seeing the same gap: engineers who could pass an interview but couldn't build a feature from scratch, or graduates who knew theory but had never deployed anything. I wasn't trying to create a course platform. I was trying to solve a problem I watched repeat itself batch after batch.
Right now I'm running MERN stack and Python-focused batches in parallel, and I'm building every curriculum update alongside my own development work. The AI modules I teach today are the same things I used in client projects last month. That's not a selling line — it's the only way I know how to teach.
I don't position myself as a guru or a mentor with a fancy title. I'm a developer who runs training programs, shares the process publicly, and measures success by what graduates actually build and where they end up. 5+ batches in, that's starting to speak for itself.
3–4 yrs
Industry experience
5+
Batches completed
200+
Students trained
Pratik Sabale
Founder, LearnSynaptic
Photo placeholderHow I teach
Three principles that run through every program I build. Not policies — convictions I've developed from watching what actually works.
"Theory without building is useless."
Every topic in every program is taught through something you make. If you can't deploy it, explain it to a client, or demo it in an interview — we didn't do our job.
"Tools without understanding are dangerous."
Using ChatGPT, LangChain, or Docker without knowing why things work means you can't debug when they break. We teach the layer below the tool — always.
"Real projects beat certificates."
A live GitHub repo and a deployed app with a public URL will get you further than a certificate PDF. We grade you by what you've shipped, not what you've submitted.
How we got here
LearnSynaptic didn't start with a business plan. It started with a batch.
Started training MERN batches in Pune
First cohort was small — 8 students, a shared screen, and a lot of debugging sessions. The curriculum was rough but the feedback was clear: hands-on beats theory every time.
Launched the GenAI Builder Program
When LLMs went mainstream, the demand for "how do I actually build with this?" spiked overnight. Built the GenAI Builder curriculum from scratch to answer exactly that.
Crossed 5+ batches, 200+ students trained
The number that mattered wasn't the total — it was seeing former students get hired and come back to say it changed their trajectory. That's what made this feel like something worth scaling.
Running 4 programs across India
AI Full Stack Dev + DevOps, GenAI Builder → Freelancer, Data Science AI/ML, and AI Beginner Bootcamp — all active, all live. Pune origin, pan-India reach.
The mission
India is producing hundreds of thousands of engineering graduates every year. Most of them are smart, motivated, and completely unprepared for what tech companies actually need. That gap isn't a student problem — it's a curriculum problem.
LearnSynaptic exists to build India's next generation of AI-ready developers. Not by teaching more content, but by teaching the right content in the right sequence — with real projects, real feedback, and a direct line to the job market.
We started in Pune because that's where I am. But the batch I'm running right now has students from Hyderabad, Bangalore, Delhi, and Nagpur. The platform is pan-India. The origin is Pune. The goal is to train every serious student who wants to build a tech career — wherever they are.
Come learn with someone who's still building.
Batches run regularly — check the programs page for current start dates. If you want to build real things and get real outcomes, that's what we do here.