How elite business schools like Wharton are overhauling curriculum as AI reshapes Wall Street bankers' futures
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How elite business schools like Wharton are overhauling curriculum as AI reshapes Wall Street bankers' futures
"As artificial intelligence becomes table stakes on Wall Street, business schools are racing to overhaul their programs for finance industry hopefuls. The technology is set to automate much of the work that has defined junior bankers' roles, including the rote tasks of building models or the endless tinkering of slide decks. Across the country, universities are adding AI-focused courses, launching new majors, and retraining professors to prepare students for a world where algorithms handle the grunt work and humans provide the judgment."
"Jacqueline Arthur, global head of human capital management at Goldman Sachs, told Business Insider that, as AI becomes more commonplace, the firm has doubled down on efforts to probe candidates' analytical thinking. When meeting with students, the firm tries "to see how they think critically, react in the moment, and solve a problem," she said - essentially, the attributes that would make a"
Artificial intelligence is becoming essential in finance and is automating many tasks traditionally performed by junior bankers, including model building and slide preparation. Universities nationwide are adding AI-focused courses, launching new majors, and retraining faculty to teach how algorithms handle routine work while humans supply judgment. Wharton is creating an AI-centered academic track integrating psychology, ethics, and governance. Vanderbilt is establishing a College of Connected Computing. Recruiters increasingly seek candidates who can interpret AI outputs, question system logic, and translate insights into strategy. Goldman Sachs emphasizes probing analytical thinking and observing how candidates think critically, react, and solve problems.
Read at Business Insider
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