• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Chicago Sports Today

Chicago Sports Today

Chicago Sports News continuously updated

  • Bears
  • Baseball
    • Cubs
    • White Sox
  • Basketball
    • Bulls
    • Sky
  • Blackhawks
  • Colleges
    • DePaul
    • Illinois
    • Loyola
    • Northwestern
    • Notre Dame
    • UIC
    • Valparaiso
  • Soccer
    • Fire
    • Red Stars
  • Team Stores

University task force examines adding AI core requirement

December 13, 2025 by The Observer

Since September, a task force within the Data, AI, and Computing Initiativehas been exploring the best means of incorporating AI into Notre Dame’s curriculum.

The initiative is led by professor of computer science and engineering and founding director of the Lucy Family Institute for Data and Society Nitesh Chawla. It seeks to advance the University’s research in all subject areas and assist educators in finding better ways to incorporate AI into their curriculum. It may also add new courses and degrees to the University’s repertoire.

The initiative is part of the 2033Strategic Framework, which organizes efforts to further various University goals over the next decade.

The task force, in partnership with NDLearning, is compiling their findings in a report that will be submitted to the University in the spring semester. The report will consider potential courses, programs and degrees that the addition of AI could create.

In an interview with The Observer, Chawla explained the initiative aims to address the reality that data, AI and computing affect nearly all academic programs at the University.

The task force’s website maintains that “It will not consider any existing programs or curricula, only new offerings.”

Heading the task force are co-chair professors Patrick Flynn and Michael Hildreth. Flynn is the undergraduate lead, while Hildreth will lead the graduate aspects of the task force. Flynn denied a request for comment.

The task force is split into two focuses: the graduate and undergraduate curriculum.

The undergraduate component of the task force will seek to support professors as they navigate how data, AI and computing will impact their courses as well as explore the inclusion of a data, AI and computing requirement into the University’s core curriculum.

For professors, this means they will know longer need to fight what Chawla calls the inevitability of students using AI for their coursework. Instead, AI will be incorporated into their courses, with the goal of preserving the core principles of the class.

Chawla envisions a course that would teach students the fundamentals of AI, and the risks and responsibilities that come with using it as they apply it in the workforce. He noted even just a Google search brings students face-to-face with AI.

The task force will recommend one of two options:implementing the requirement at the University level, or kicking the responsibility down to colleges and schools, who could shape the requirement to suit their individual needs.

Chawla classifies the University’s approach to AIas unique. While other universities have introduced AI majors, Notre Dame must consider more pedagogical questions about what AI represents inside any course.

The task force plans to host a series of town halls to address the issue – open to faculty, undergraduate advisors and students. A town hall for facultyconvenes Monday in the Carey Auditorium of Hesburgh Library, and one for students the next day.

In preparation for the town hall, students were asked to fill out a pre-event google form with their initial thoughts on the following questions:

  1. What new elective or interdisciplinary courses could be developedto enableallundergraduate students, regardless of major, to learn about data, AI, and computational sciences, especially in the context of professional work demands and expectations?
  2. What new degrees, majors, or minors might be created to address the topics of data, AI, and computation? Should existing ones be organized or restructured?
  3. Should data and/or AI and/or computing literacy be a required or core curricular component for all undergraduates, and what would courses in this component look like?

Chawla hopes the gatherings will provide insights into how students are currently using AI, as well as from faculty on how their curricula could be adjusted to account for AI’s presence. She said faculty and their departments will ultimately make those calls.

In an email obtained by The Observer on Oct. 13, students in the Program of Liberal Studies were asked by professor Robert Goulding, a member of the task force, to provide feedback on the possibility of including an AI course to the core curriculum.

“If there were a new Core category on DAC, it would allow humanistic and social science perspectives,” Goudling wrote. “There would also be classes offered out of Engineering that were more technical.”

The email included broad ideas for classes that embody the requirement, including “Computing and Critical Theory,””AI and the Labor Market” and “History of AI.”

Chawla asked the task force to finish the bulk of the work by the end of the semester. He believes undergraduates and professors alike are owed fast action to ensure they are equipped to navigate how AI is changing education and many aspects of life after graduation.

After the report is completed, Chawla will review the task force’s findings before speaking with the University’s deans to explore their integration into their courses. He hopes the committee’s suggestions will begin to be implemented for the next academic year.

Filed Under: Notre Dame

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • 3 Underrated players for White Sox No. 1 overall pick if they pass on Roch Cholowsky
  • Egipto revela estatuas colosales restauradas de un faraón en Luxor
  • Report: Bears are ‘optimistic’ Rome Odunze will be able to play vs. Browns
  • Today in History: Heart of Atlanta Motel v. United States
  • Blackhawks Recall Nick Lardis

Categories

Archives

Our Partners

All Sports

  • CHGO
  • Chicago Tribune
  • Chicago Sun-Times
  • 247 Sports
  • 670 The Score
  • Bleacher Report
  • Chicago Sports Nation
  • Da Windy City
  • NBC Sports Chicago
  • OurSports Central
  • Sports Mockery
  • The Sports Daily
  • The Sports Fan Journal
  • The Spun
  • USA Today
  • WGN 9

Baseball

  • MLB.com - Cubs
  • MLB.com - White Sox
  • Bleed Cubbie Blue
  • Cubbies Crib
  • Cubs Insider
  • Inside The White Sox
  • Last Word On Baseball - Cubs
  • Last Word On Baseball - White Sox
  • MLB Trade Rumors - Cubs
  • MLB Trade Rumors - White Sox
  • South Side Sox
  • Southside Showdown
  • Sox Machine
  • Sox Nerd
  • Sox On 35th

Basketball

  • NBA.com
  • Amico Hoops
  • Basketball Insiders
  • Blog A Bull
  • High Post Hoops
  • Hoops Hype
  • Hoops Rumors
  • Last Word On Pro Basketball
  • Pippen Ain't Easy
  • Pro Basketball Talk
  • Real GM

Football

  • Chicago Bears
  • Bears Gab
  • Bear Goggles On
  • Bears Wire
  • Da Bears Blog
  • Last Word On Pro Football
  • NFL Trade Rumors
  • Our Turf Football
  • Pro Football Focus
  • Pro Football Rumors
  • Pro Football Talk
  • Total Bears
  • Windy City Gridiron

Hockey

  • Blackhawk Up
  • Elite Prospects
  • Last Word On Hockey
  • My NHL Trade Rumors
  • Pro Hockey Rumors
  • Pro Hockey Talk
  • Second City Hockey
  • The Hockey Writers

Soccer

  • Hot Time In Old Town
  • Last Word On Soccer - Fire
  • Last Word On Soccer - Red Stars
  • MLS Multiplex

Colleges

  • Big East Coast Bias
  • Busting Brackets
  • College Football News
  • College Sports Madness
  • Inside NU
  • Inside The Irish
  • Last Word On College Football - Notre Dame
  • One Foot Down
  • Saturday Blitz
  • Slap The Sign
  • The Daily Northwestern
  • The Observer
  • UHND.com
  • Zags Blog

Copyright © 2025 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in