AI Training at HBCUs: Building the Next AI Workforce Pipeline

 

Dr. Marcia F. Robinson is a senior certified HR professional, diversity strategist, and curator of TheHBCUCareerCenter.com. She advises organizations on building inclusive talent pipelines and improving diversity recruiting outcomes.

AI Is Showing Up on HBCU Campuses—Are We Paying Attention?

For years, The HBCU Career Center has talked about access, exposure, and opportunity for HBCU students. What’s happening now with artificial intelligence is different. This is not theory. This is knowledge infrastructure being built in real time—on HBCU campuses.

AI training at HBCUs is no longer a future conversation. It is happening now, and it could reshape what career readiness looks like for students across multiple disciplines.

Major tech companies are no longer sitting on the sidelines. They are investing, partnering, and embedding AI training directly into the student experience. 

Cynic and workforce historian that I am, I see the partnerships and think that the tech firms have their own motives. One could be, to get Black people to train their systems and add authentic Black experiential stories. But more on that later. 

Programs like Google’s Career Launchpad are delivering no-cost AI and cloud training at scale through the Thurgood Marshall College Fund. 

NVIDIA is working with Miles College to integrate AI across the entire campus. 

Meanwhile, IBM is introducing AI training as early as freshman year through its SkillsBuild initiative. 

And leaders like Robert F. Smith are investing in AI curriculum at institutions like Morehouse and Spelman.

Let’s be clear—in addition to getting knowledge, this is a talent strategy.

HBCU AI Programs You Should Know About

Google + Thurgood Marshall College Fund

  • Program: Google Career Launchpad (AI + Cloud)

  • What it offers: Free training, certifications, hands-on labs

NVIDIA + Miles College

  • Focus: Campus-wide AI integration

  • What it offers: AI curriculum across disciplines, research, ecosystem access

IBM SkillsBuild (HBCU Freshman Initiative)

  • Focus: Early AI exposure

  • What it offers: Foundational AI training starting freshman year

Anthropic + CodePath

  • Focus: AI tools embedded into coursework

  • What it offers: Real-world projects using generative AI tools

Robert F. Smith / Vista Equity Partners

  • Focus: AI curriculum + ownership mindset

  • Schools: Morehouse College, Spelman College

  • What it offers: Generative AI, analytics, ethical AI applications

Ellucian (HBCU AI Conference & Training Summit)

  • Focus: Institutional AI strategy

  • What it offers: Training, convening, leadership alignment

Why This Matters: The AI Workforce Pipeline at HBCUs

We are watching the early stages of a diverse AI talent pipeline take shape. These HBCU AI programs are not just about learning new tools, they are about access to high-growth careers, early alignment with industry platforms, and building competitive, future-ready skill sets.

Employers should be paying close attention. The next generation of AI talent is not only coming from traditional pipelines—it is being developed intentionally at HBCUs.

The Role of The HBCU Career Center

At The HBCU Career Center, we see our role clearly.

We help the HBCU community connect:

  • Training with Opportunity

  • Certification with Employment

  • Talent with Employers who are ready 

AI training at HBCUs is building capability. Now we must ensure it leads to careers.

Call to Action

Students: Explore these programs and build AI skills now

Employers: Source talent from HBCU AI programs

Partners: Invest in expanding this pipeline

Because the future of work is being built—and HBCUs are part of that story.