California State University Launches Systemwide ChatGPT Edu Deployment

In the largest deployment of ChatGPT to date, California State University is rolling out ChatGPT Edu, OpenAI's generative AI product designed for education institutions, to more than 460,000 students and 63,000-plus staff and faculty across the system's 23 campuses. While other universities have similarly embraced ChatGPT in an enterprise-wide manner (most notably, Arizona State University in its groundbreaking partnership with OpenAI last year), CSU is the first university in the United States to take the deployment systemwide and marks the largest implementation of ChatGPT by any single organization or company anywhere in the world, OpenAI said in a news announcement.

The move is part of a larger public-private initiative to become an "AI-powered university system" in partnership with a number of tech companies, including OpenAI, Adobe, Google, AWS, IBM, Intel, Microsoft, NVIDIA, Instructure, LinkedIn, and others. ChatGPT Edu is just one of many AI technologies that CSU plans to make available across its campuses in the coming weeks.

"We are proud to announce this innovative, highly collaborative public-private initiative that will position the CSU as a global leader among higher education systems in the impactful, responsible and equitable adoption of artificial intelligence," said CSU Chancellor Mildred García, in a statement. "The comprehensive strategy will elevate our students' educational experience across all fields of study, empower our faculty's teaching and research, and help provide the highly educated workforce that will drive California's future AI-driven economy."

The initiative will be guided by the newly formed AI Workforce Acceleration Board, a collaboration among leading tech companies, California Governor Gavin Newsom's office, and CSU representatives. The board will work to "foster innovation and drive interdisciplinary practical applications of AI by organizing a series of AI challenges" that "encourage CSU students and faculty to work together on pressing issues such as climate change and housing affordability, leveraging AI technologies to create impactful solutions," the university said.

"The latest AI technologies can be used in many contexts, from academia to the workforce and we are excited to work with industry leaders to help the CSU build on our success in an AI-driven economy," said Ed Clark, chief information officer for the university. "At the CSU, we have two imperatives: to equip our students with the skills to leverage these powerful tools, and to transform our own institutional practices through AI to better serve the largest public university system in the nation."

CSU outlined three key AI strategies in its announcement of the initiative:

  • AI Commons: A dedicated platform serves as a hub of free AI tools, training programs, certifications, and CSU-developed solutions for all students, faculty, and staff.
  • AI Educational Innovations: CSU will provide faculty with AI tools, resources, and training to "enable transformative teaching methods, foster groundbreaking research, and address key concerns about AI adoption within the academic environment."
  • AI Workforce Training: CSU students will have access to industry apprenticeship programs that provide opportunities to work in AI-enabled organizations and gain real-world AI skills.

"This is an inspiring example of education, private industry and government coming together to implement a bold solution that ensures students are prepared for the workforce in California and nationwide," commented Melissa Loble, chief academic officer at Instructure. "By leveraging experiential learning and innovative teaching and learning practices, this initiative will be a model for other education systems and states looking to ensure future generations are AI-ready and empowered."

"It is critical that the entire education ecosystem — institutions, systems, technologists, educators, and governments — work together to ensure that all students have access to AI and gain the skills to use it responsibly," said Leah Belsky, VP and general manager of Education at OpenAI. "CSU is setting a bold example for the education sector."

About the Author

Rhea Kelly is editor in chief for Campus Technology, THE Journal, and Spaces4Learning. She can be reached at [email protected].

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