Chandigarh University, Uttar Pradesh (CU-UP) conducted its first AI Bootcamp in collaboration with Microsoft and began to address the gap between academia and the rapidly emerging technologies in industries. The Bootcamp had over 300 students participating across multiple disciplines including Engineering, Business, Commerce, and Computer Applications. Students participated in training and hands-on demonstrations of new-age AI tools and technologies.
So the AI Bootcamp was not just a workshop, it was more the start of the amazing partnership. Microsoft signed an MoU with CU-UP to initiate industry-integrated programs in Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML) so students would have access to the transformative technology at an early stage. The MoU is for a pathway with technical programs fused with AI technology that will include a real-world application including python programming and AI.
The boot camp was part of the Unnati AI initiative that has been launched in partnership between Microsoft FITT IIT Delhi, and CU, where CU’s Technology Business Incubator (CU-TBI) is the implementing partner. Not of little importance is the commitment within the Unnati AI initiative where, of the locations for participation, 50% of participants will be female or female candidate institutions with an emphasis on exploring nurturing student innovators and early-stage entrepreneurs respectively for inclusivity.
During the seminar, MP and CU Chancellor Satnam Singh Sandhu stated that the university is focused on education relevant to industry. Emphasizing CU's twelve-year history and new campus in Uttar Pradesh, he noted that the university's aim to have collaborative programs related to forward-looking areas such as AI, ML, Data Science, Cloud Computing, and Fintech--many being offered for the first time in the state.
Also in agreement, Nikhil Agarwal, MD - FITT IIT Delhi, has commented that CU-UP's infrastructure and vision were wonderful. He spoke about the relevance of AI in real world applications, and said that opportunities in programs such as Unnati AI, can allow students to become the next generation of innovators.
Another speaker, Microsoft's Lipika Sharma, talked about the investment that CU-UP has made, in being the first AI-augmented multidisciplinary university in India, and noted that while AI does not replace humans, it is those that are ahead of the curve with skills to lead in the technology driven age.
Abhishek Tiwari of Venture Mozart thought the university is taking a proactive role in including AI into the curriculum, especially from a startup perspective, when he stated that AI "is already changing industries" and "to not just combine skills but combine thinking with technology and create innovative business ideas".
In the same vein, CU Managing Director Jai Inder Singh Sandhu mentioned plans for additional five Centres of Excellence, and reveal that two of the Centres of Excellence would occur in the first phase. The new campus, built at a cost of over ?2500 crores, is already starting to turn heads and create buzz by signing 23 leading industry players partnerships in the very first year. They also mentioned launching a new ?3 crore CV Raman Scholarship to assist students in honouring scientific research.
As AI becomes continue to become more and more pervasive in how we act and live, parties such as this bootcamp are models showing how educational institutions can prepare students for a future in which they'll be tasked not just to react, but to be ahead of the curve.