Harvard Business School (HBS) is pioneering an evolution in its teaching methodologies by integrating artificial intelligence into its classrooms, moving beyond its traditional case method. This initiative builds on the introduction of the Data Science and AI for Leaders course last year, which is now mandatory for first-year MBA students. The AI integration has expanded to key areas such as marketing, entrepreneurship, and organizational behavior, fundamentally changing how students engage with case discussions.
HBS professor Mitchell B. Weiss noted, “We have a lot of live AI case exercises we’ve built and deployed in class,” highlighting the use of “AI-based simulations, AI-based avatars, a sort of AI-based building” that enhances the learning experience. Students in the MBA program now have access to a diverse array of AI platforms, including ChatGPT, Harvard AI Sandbox, Claude, and others, as stated by professor Iavor I. Bojinov.
This technological integration is altering the dynamics of classroom discussions. Professor Todd Lensman observed that students now come prepared with a stronger foundational understanding of the case material, thanks to AI tools available outside the classroom. “We come into the classroom understanding that that is, in some sense, a higher baseline or a different baseline than you might have expected in the past,” he remarked.
Weiss argued that while AI is adept at transferring information and handling written assignments, the importance of live questioning remains paramount in effective teaching. “If what you were doing before — which is what we were doing — which is asking deep and proper questions live, then this teaching method is actually very suitable for these days,” he said.
Professor Rembrand M. Koning added that the enhanced baseline knowledge brought by AI has led to more productive discussions. “It just heightens our ability to have really rich discussions and sort of get to the core business ideas that we love talking about here at HBS,” he said. Koning also mentioned exploring ways to utilize AI in class preparation, emphasizing that the goal is to deepen engagement with the material rather than facilitate shortcuts.
Despite the enthusiasm for AI, Koning cautioned against an entirely AI-driven curriculum. “Let’s make sure we keep some history classes, right? And other things where there’s no AI, we’re going to do it old school. I think both really work well together,” he said. The curriculum for the required AI course has also evolved, with Bojinov noting that it now comprises three modules focusing on AI’s impact on workplace tasks, AI-enabled business models, and essential issues of AI safety and sovereignty.
HBS Dean Srikant M. Datar discussed the broader curricular shift as a necessary adaptation to a business environment increasingly influenced by digital transformation. “Leaders will both need to understand how to use AI, how to scale AI, how to govern AI, but also how to think about issues like privacy, how do you think about issues of security,” he stated in a February video post.
Continuing its history of early adoption, HBS equipped all MBA students with access to the latest version of ChatGPT in fall 2023, a move Weiss claimed was unmatched by other leading business schools at the time. “It was very parallel to something that happened in the ’80s, when the PC showed up,” Weiss said, recalling HBS’s requirement for incoming students to own personal computers in 1984.
Koning emphasized that AI proficiency has become essential for MBA candidates entering today’s job market. “Right now, if you want to get a job out of the MBA program, you need to know how to use these AI tools, because they’re already part of the interview process at all the big tech companies, increasingly consulting, even in private equity,” he explained.
Ultimately, faculty members stressed that the primary objective of this expanded curriculum is to cultivate judgment among students. Weiss called it “our most highest important task” at HBS, asserting that the school’s mission remains to “educate leaders who make a difference in the world.” As the academic landscape evolves, HBS aims to prepare students to navigate the complexities of a changing business environment shaped by technology.
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