How an Alabama HBCU and a $5 Trillion Company Formed AI Partnership

By Barnett Wright | The Birmingham Times

About a year ago, Miles College President Bobbie Knight began conversations with a global company that would do something “amazing” for students, faculty, and the community in Alabama, she said. Those talks weren’t with just any company. Knight met with NVIDIA Corporation, which this month became the first publicly traded company to top $5 trillion in market value.

Last week, Miles College and the AI chip maker announced a collaboration to integrate AI across academic programs, faculty research, and community engagement on the Historically Black College and University’s Fairfield campus, The Birmingham Times reported.

“I wanted this partnership because the future is here. It’s not here in 10 years—it’s here right now and AI is part of the future,” said Knight during a panel discussion Friday in Birmingham. “I wanted to make sure that our students, not just at Miles but students in the City of Birmingham and Fairfield, HBCUs, and the state of Alabama are positioned to live in a world that is dominated by AI.”

Miles College is already implementing AI campus-wide, with nearly half of faculty regularly integrating AI into course design and student learning modules. Additionally, about 60 percent of the college’s research is supported by AI.

Louis Stewart, the Head of Strategic Initiatives for NVIDIA’s Global Developer Ecosystem, agreed with Knight that the partnership “is a ‘right now opportunity,’ it’s not a 5-10-year opportunity,” he said during Friday’s panel discussion.

“If all of you are not involved in AI right now, that’s a problem,” he told students. “If you don’t think about how AI can change the situations for your family, that’s a problem. If you’re not bringing your parents along, your brothers and sisters along, that’s a problem.”

A true partnership, Stewart said, is not about “how can NVIDIA invest in you, but how can NVIDIA come walk alongside you as a piece of the puzzle; and you are willing to bring the other pieces to the table. Without the rest of the puzzle, you [just] have a piece. That doesn’t do you any good.”

Knight added that she and Stewart spoke at a conference in San Jose earlier this year, which had 40,000 attendees, and at another in Washington D.C. last week with 10,000 present.

“That’s an audience that will have an opportunity to see what Miles College is doing with NVIDIA and hopefully create other opportunities for others,” she said.

The collaboration is bigger than Miles College, said the school’s president.

“We’ve talked about taking this out to K-12. Young people need to start now understanding AI and the implications of it in your daily lives, not just your life but in the lives of your parents and your grandparents because I think it has the potential to be life-changing for so many.”
https://www.birminghamtimes.com/2025/11/how-an-alabama-hbcu-and-5-trillion-company-formed-ai-partnership/

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