SUTD launches new office of AI and Digital Innovation to foster Design AI skills in students
It is the first institute of higher learning in Singapore to set up an OAIDI, as the world's first Design AI university.
The new office is a department dedicated to drive curriculum, innovation and talent development specifically through Design AI.
It will integrate Design AI principles across all educational levels as well, where every SUTD undergraduate will acquire foundational Design AI skills, while a new second major in Design and AI (DAI) will be offered to students who seek a deeper specialisation.
Additionally, the existing minor in DAI will offer students who wish to complement their primary fields of study some flexibility and degree of variation.
The OAIDI office will also coordinate university-wide efforts across the strategic priorities of talent development, research, innovation and enterprise, as well as ethical and responsible AI.
A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU
Friday, 8.30 am Asean Business
Business insights centering on South-east Asia's fast-growing economies.
Sign Up
Sign Up
This move builds on a series of steps taken by SUTD to transform the institution into a Design AI-focused powerhouse, as part of its growth strategy upon its pivot to AI in January this year.
Earlier in March 2024, the university had launched of SUTD Leap, a multi-year and multi-pronged growth strategy aimed to redesign higher education with a strong focus on design and AI.
Led by Associate Provost Professor Tony Quek, who is also head of the Information Systems Technology and Design Pillar, he will report to the Office of the Provost at SUTD on OAIDI's activities and developments.
Professor Quek said: 'At OAIDI, we want our students and researchers work alongside AI to solve real-world problems, and not simply look at cutting-edge research. We want our students, postgraduates, and professionals to be comfortable working with AI and thinking about how it can elevate ideas and solutions as part of the team.'
Professor Chee Yeow Meng, SUTD Provost and chief academic and innovation officer, said: 'The establishment of OAIDI is a significant step in our ongoing efforts to strengthen AI as a core part of what we do at SUTD.'
'It is about approaching the use AI in a way that treats it as a partner and not just a tool, and preparing our students for the AI world and equipping them with more than just basic ChatGPT skills,' he added.
SUTD's Design AI approach is embedded across the curriculum, unlike traditional AI programmes that confine it to a single discipline. Students in all its five programmes – from Architecture and Sustainable Design, Computer Science and Design, DAI, Engineering Systems and Design, and Engineering Product Development – will learn to use AI and gain hands-on experience through integrated coursework and team-based projects.
Other Singapore universities and education bodies in recent years have also been developing programmes and holistic spaces to further AI learning in to the city-state's educational landscape.
The National Institute of Education (NIE) on May 29 signed a three-year memorandum of understanding with Amazon Web Services to open a new Technology for Education Centre for applied innovation and research in education technology.
It will be housed in a new annex building in NIE's campus, and is scheduled open at around the same time as Nanyang Crescent MRT station, which will serve the Nanyang Technological University (NTU) Smart Campus.
In February 2024, NTU had also announced that it will begin offering a new interdisciplinary degree programme in AI and ethics to train a cohort of graduates to plug manpower needs in the information digital technology industry.
Its curriculum is designed to equip students with essential mathematical and computational skills so that they can develop high-quality AI solutions, while exploring the ethical complexities of AI, including how it can perpetuate inequality, bias and misinformation.
The Bachelor of Science in AI and Society programme is a four-year course, and welcomed its first batch of 60 students in August 2024.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Business Times
4 hours ago
- Business Times
SoftBank's AI investment spree to be in focus on at Q1 earnings
[TOKYO] When Japan's SoftBank Group reports earnings on Thursday, its mammoth investments in artificial intelligence companies are set to take the spotlight. Analysts and investors are keen for updates on how they will be financed, the timeline for returns to materialise and whether assets will be sold to fund the new projects. SoftBank has embarked on its biggest spending spree since the launch of its Vision Funds in 2017 and 2019. It is leading a US$40 billion funding round for ChatGPT maker OpenAI. SoftBank has until the end of the year to fund its US$22.5 billion portion, although the remainder has been subscribed, according to a source familiar with the matter. It is also leading the financing for the Stargate project - a US$500 billion scheme to develop data centres in the United States, part of its effort to position itself as the 'organiser of the industry,' founder Masayoshi Son said in June. SoftBank has yet to release details on what kinds of returns its financing of the Stargate project could generate. The extent of third-party investment will determine what other financing tools, such as bank loans and debt issuance, it may have to deploy. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up In July, SoftBank raised US$4.8 billion by selling off a portion of its holding in T-Mobile. 'If other sources of capital are less supportive, SoftBank could look to asset-backed finance, which is collateralised by equity in other holdings,' Macquarie analyst Paul Golding said. The Japanese conglomerate is expected to post a net profit of 127.6 billion yen (S$1.11 billion) in the April-June quarter, according to the average estimate of three analysts polled by LSEG. That would mark SoftBank's second consecutive quarter of profit and follow its first annual profit in four years when it was helped by a strong performance by its telecom holdings and higher valuations for its later-stage startups. Its results are, however, typically very volatile and difficult to estimate due to manifold investments, many of which are not listed. SoftBank's performance in exiting from investments and distributing profits has been patchy of late. The Vision Funds had made a cumulative investment loss of US$475 million as of end-March. That said, 13 of 18 analysts have a 'buy' or 'strong buy' rating for SoftBank's stock, according to LSEG. Although there is some concern in the market that AI-related valuations have become bubbly, they continue to climb. OpenAI is in early-stage discussions about a stock sale that would allow employees to cash out and could value the company at about US$500 billion, according to the source - a huge jump from its current valuation of US$300 billion. REUTERS
Business Times
a day ago
- Business Times
OpenAI in talks for share sale at US$500 billion valuation
[SAN FRANCISCO] OpenAI is in early talks about a potential sale of stock for current and former employees at a valuation of about US$500 billion, sources briefed on the investment discussions said, marking an enormous gain in value for the artificial intelligence (AI) leader. The company is targeting a secondary stock sale in the billions of US dollars, the sources said, asking to remain anonymous because they were not authorised to discuss the matter publicly. Existing investors, including Thrive Capital, have approached OpenAI about buying some of the employee shares, the sources said. If the deal goes ahead, it would elevate OpenAI's on-paper price tag by roughly two-thirds. Its previous valuation stood at US$300 billion in a US$40 billion financing round led by SoftBank Group, making it one of the largest privately held companies in the world. Representatives for OpenAI and Thrive declined to comment. The latest move follows news last week that the startup had secured US$8.3 billion from a syndicate of investors for a second tranche of that US$40 billion financing, which was oversubscribed by about five times, according to one of the sources briefed on the discussions. OpenAI managed to snag that funding ahead of schedule, the source said. Major US startups often negotiate share sales for their employees as a way to reward and retain staff, and also attract external investors. The company run by Sam Altman is looking to leverage investor demand to provide employees with liquidity that reflects the company's growth, according to one of the sources familiar with the investment negotiations. In recent months, OpenAI lost several members of its research staff to Meta Platforms as the latter firm aggressively recruited top talent from Apple and other competitors for its 'superintelligence' AI team, offering pay packages in the nine-figure range. A secondary sale for OpenAI could serve as a way to incentivise staff to remain at the company who are being offered lavish compensation. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up OpenAI, whose ChatGPT ushered in a new era of AI development, has overseen a spate of major recent technology launches. Those include a pair of open and freely available AI models that can mimic the human process of reasoning, months after China's DeepSeek gained global attention with its own open AI software. It's now preparing the release of its latest GPT-5 model, aimed at shoring up OpenAI's lead in an increasingly competitive sphere. The startup has announced it expects ChatGPT to reach 700 million weekly active users this week, up from 500 million at the end of March. The app also recently crossed three billion user messages a day. And in May, it unveiled plans to acquire the AI device startup co-founded by Apple veteran Jony Ive in a nearly US$6.5 billion all-stock deal, joining forces with the legendary designer to make a push into hardware. It's also facing a number of challenges. OpenAI is currently in separate discussions about its future as a for-profit company, a negotiation that's dragged on for months. Microsoft, which backed OpenAI with some US$13.75 billion and has the right to use its intellectual property, is the biggest holdout among the ChatGPT maker's investors, Bloomberg previously reported. At issue is the size of Microsoft's stake in a newly configured company. The talks have since broadened into a renegotiation of their relationship, with the software maker seeking to avoid suddenly losing access to the startup's technology before the end of the current deal, which expires in 2030. BLOOMBERG

Straits Times
a day ago
- Straits Times
Meta says working to thwart WhatsApp scammers
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Often run by organised gangs, the scams range from bogus cryptocurrency investments to get-rich-quick pyramid schemes. SAN FRANCISCO, United States - Meta on Aug 5 said it shut nearly seven million WhatsApp accounts linked to scammers in the first half of this year and is ramping up safeguards against such schemes. 'Our team identified the accounts and disabled them before the criminal organisations that created them could use them,' WhatsApp external affairs director Clair Deevy said. Often run by organised gangs, the scams range from bogus cryptocurrency investments to get-rich-quick pyramid schemes, WhatsApp executives said in a briefing. 'There is always a catch and it should be a red flag for everyone: you have to pay upfront to get promised returns or earnings,' Meta-owned WhatsApp said in a blog post. WhatsApp detected and banned more than 6.8 million accounts linked to scam centers, most of them in South-east Asia , according to Meta. WhatsApp and Meta worked with OpenAI to disrupt a scam traced to Cambodia that used ChatGPT to generate text messages containing a link to a WhatsApp chat to hook victims, according to the tech firms. Meta on Aug 5 began prompting WhatsApp users to be wary when added to unfamiliar chat groups by people they do not know. New 'safety overviews' provide information about the group and tips on spotting scams, along with the option of making a quick exit. 'We've all been there: someone you don't know attempting to message you, or add you to a group chat, promising low-risk investment opportunities or easy money, or saying you have an unpaid bill that's overdue,' Meta said in a blog post. 'The reality is, these are often scammers trying to prey on people's kindness, trust and willingness to help – or, their fears that they could be in trouble if they don't send money fast.' AFP