In many ways, there has never been a聽better time to聽lead a聽college of聽computer science. At聽Northeastern University鈥檚 Khoury College of聽Computer Sciences, where I聽have been dean since 2022, our student body has tripled in聽the past decade and enrolments are still soaring, while the gender gap is聽shrinking. We see great enthusiasm for careers in聽this dynamic, challenging field.
But computer science is at a聽crossroads. A聽cursory review of聽daily news headlines reveals ongoing angst about the role of聽AI in聽fair decision-making, automation and job loss. And many of聽the best practices in聽our field, such as sharing open-source software and creating large-scale platforms for sharing information and news, have also enabled unintended, unfortunate outcomes.
For example, dubious actors have been enabled to piece together code and algorithms for face recognition. Coupled with the ability to scrape large amounts of data from social media platforms, these actors have sold extensive face-recognition systems to law enforcement agencies. While these systems can help identify and rescue abducted children, we now have databases filled with social media images of non-consenting children鈥檚 faces.
Such unforeseen outcomes raise questions that cut to the heart of our mission as computer science educators. Is an abundance of computer science graduates good for higher education and, more importantly, the world? Are our students pursuing high-income jobs regardless of the impact of their work? How do we adjust our curriculum to incorporate the effects of computer science in society? How do we encourage our graduates to build ethical and trustworthy computing systems?
探花视频
I believe the field of computer science needs a fundamental course correction. We can no longer be singularly tied to our mathematical and engineering foundations, focused only on what can be built. We must also ask what should be built, and who needs to be part of that design and implementation process. These questions demand that computer science education and research broaden their community, not diminish聽it.
At Northeastern, the vast majority of our students study core programmes in computer science, data science and cybersecurity in tandem with diverse fields such as business, biology, philosophy and law, through our combined majors. And over a聽third of our faculty have joint appointments with other departments, including philosophy, journalism, law, psychology, health sciences, and mechanical and electrical engineering.
探花视频
An interdisciplinary education will help to ensure that our graduates get beyond the 鈥渕ove fast and break things鈥 concept that has often driven the tech industry over the past two decades and step up to the challenge of designing AI聽systems that rise above our human biases, creating life-enhancing advancements that benefit as many people as possible.
We also need to consider who is entering computer science programmes in the first place. While we聽have taken strides be more diverse, we聽are still seeing a deficit in 鈥渦nder-represented populations鈥, including women, people of colour and those who face cultural barriers to high school computer science opportunities. At Northeastern, we created a bridge master鈥檚 computer science programme, called , for students with no formal tech background looking to pivot to a high-tech career. Some of these students come straight from undergraduate programmes, where many students are shut out of computer science programmes because of overwhelming demand. Others look to complement their current careers in healthcare, finance and law. More than half of the students who take advantage of this 鈥渟econd chance鈥 opportunity are women.
Many programmes across the US are also grappling with how to integrate ethics. At聽Northeastern, our approach recognises that stand-alone courses do聽not help students to understand technical trade-offs and methods for developing ethically informed systems, so we strive to integrate ethics across the curriculum, starting at matriculation with our 鈥淥ath for Computing鈥.
Modelled on the Hippocratic oath, this statement 鈥 which all of our students recite and adopt 鈥 recognises that with computing knowledge comes a great responsibility to serve society. We weave the tenets of this oath into our curriculum and position it as a North Star for all students.
探花视频
As we enter the new era of transformative advancements in聽AI, we聽cannot afford to ignore this great responsibility. The stakes are simply too聽high.
is dean of Northeastern University鈥檚 Khoury College of Computer Sciences.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Program a course correction
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