作者:TOI Education / Aug 13, 2025, 06:08 ISTShareAA+Text SizeSmallMediumLarge
Barnard College has joined a growing group of institutions embedding artificial intelligence directly into student life. Beginning August 1, students can access Googleâs Gemini and NotebookLM through their Barnard email accounts, following a July 29 announcement. The rollout is part of an expanded agreement with Google and was framed as a step toward giving every student a âbasic level of AI literacy.âThis move is not happening in isolation. Across the United States, universities are racing to integrate AI tools, professional development pathways, and ethical training into their academic offerings, signalling that AI proficiency is becoming a core graduate skill.
Barnardâs approach goes beyond simply providing access to AI platforms. The college has developed a four-level AI Literacy Framework, outlined in its official publications and used across student and faculty training. This framework progresses from basic awareness of AI concepts to advanced, discipline-specific applications, and culminates in critical evaluation and ethical use. Workshops, AI studios, and collaborative learning sessions planned for the fall are aligned with this structure, ensuring students build layered competencies.
Columbia Universityâs AI initiatives extend from campus tools to industry-focused training. The university offers a Professional Certificate Program in Artificial Intelligence, confirmed through its official course portals and partner sites. The program covers machine learning, robotics, and intelligent systems, and is designed for professionals and tech leaders. Learners can complete the program online or in an executive format, enabling both working professionals and on-campus participants to deepen their AI expertise.Alongside this, Columbia continues to provide campus-developed AI resources such as CU-GPT and CHAT, as well as access to ChatGPT Education. Its Center for Teaching and Learning supports faculty in creating assignments that combine AI tools with critical reflection.
NYU is pursuing AI literacy at multiple levels of education. NYU Shanghai runs an AI Pre-College Summer Program that combines coding instruction in Python, NumPy, and PyTorch with discussions on AI ethics and hands-on project work. The program targets high school students seeking early exposure to AI.In addition, NYUâs Tandon School of Engineering and other divisions offer high school summer programs, undergraduate research opportunities, and cross-disciplinary workshops designed to integrate AI into fields as varied as healthcare, media, and public policy. The university also provides its community with access to Gemini and NotebookLM, paired with guidance on responsible use.
MIT has built an AI learning ecosystem that serves both technical and non-technical learners. Its Professional Certificate Program in Machine Learning & Artificial Intelligence covers advanced topics and awards formal certification to graduates. For those without a coding background, MIT offers low- or no-code AI training routes, making the technology accessible to professionals in non-technical fields.MITâs commitment to accessibility extends globally, with foundational AI courses offered online to learners around the world. On campus, approved tools such as Adobe Firefly, AWS Bedrock, Azure OpenAI, and Google Gemini are available under strict governance and security guidelines. The Responsible AI for Social Empowerment and Education (RAISE) initiative, including global outreach programs like FutureMakers and Day of AI, has reached more than a million Kâ12 students.
Technology companies are fuelling the trend. Google has committed one billion dollars over three years to provide AI tools, cloud resources, and training to more than 100 US universities. OpenAI and Anthropic are competing for partnerships, offering their platforms to campuses at no cost and supporting research initiatives.The academic argument for AI is also growing stronger. Well-designed AI tutors have been shown to improve student performance in certain disciplines, while educators continue to wrestle with questions about plagiarism, over-reliance, and the erosion of independent thinking.
Barnardâs adoption of AI tools and its structured literacy framework place it alongside institutions like Columbia, NYU, and MIT in redefining what it means to graduate âcareer-readyâ in the AI era. While their strategies differ, Barnard with its tiered literacy model, Columbia with professional certifications, NYU with early-pipeline education, and MIT with both technical mastery and global outreach. They share a common goal: to ensure students leave campus not just with access to AI, but with the ability to use it critically, ethically, and effectively.TOI Education is on WhatsApp now. Follow us here.