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Case School of Engineering creates new Computer & Data Sciences Department

FEATURED | December 12, 2019
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF

$5 million gift from alumnus also creates the Kevin J. Kranzusch Professorship

杏吧视频 has launched a in the Case School of Engineering and announced the Kevin J. Kranzusch Professorship, which will be held by the future chair of the new department.

The new department was made possible primarily with a $5 million gift from Kranzusch, a Case School of Engineering alumnus, who said a spike in computer sciences enrollment, coupled with the advent of Artificial Intelligence (AI), inspired him to make the commitment.

Kranzusch_mug
Kevin J. Kranzusch

鈥淚鈥檓 so excited to be a part of this effort,鈥 said Kranzusch, vice president of a software team working on autonomous vehicles, robotics and gaming devices at NVIDIA, a Santa Clara, California-based company he helped build, starting in 1994. 鈥淐omputer sciences, especially AI and machine learning, are the future, and I hope this can play a part in helping our students to excel in those areas.鈥

The Case School of Engineering has launched a national search for the inaugural chair of the new Computer & Data Sciences Department. An has been published on the school鈥檚 website.

鈥淭he new computer and data sciences department will anchor our students鈥 educational experience in the discipline, providing them a rich field of subject-matter classes and opportunities for research experience,鈥 said Venkataramanan 鈥淩agu鈥 Balakrishnan, the Charles H. Phipps Dean of the Case School of Engineering.

The field of study previously had been offered within the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. 

Of the Kranzusch gift, $4 million will establish a permanent endowment fund for the chairperson and professorship, and $1 million for the department chair to use for strategic initiatives.

Kranzusch vision and investment

Kranzusch said his gift is intended to keep the engineering school at the leading edge of the dynamic field of computer sciences. He said he had discussed the importance of high-performance computing, parallel programming and the enormous growth of big data with university officials for about a decade.

鈥淏ut even I didn't foresee the coming explosion in data science, machine learning and AI. Almost every industry鈥攔etail, finance, manufacturing, medicine, transportation鈥攊s being impacted,鈥 he told university trustees. 鈥淲e are experiencing a fundamental shift in computing.鈥

Kranzusch also identified the collective spirit across campus as a catalyst for his support鈥攁nd a key to future success. He said many of the computer science faculty he鈥檚 spoken with cited that same multidisciplinary approach to education.

photo of Venkataramanan "Ragu" Balakrishnan, the Charles H. Phipps Dean of the Case School of Engineering.
Venkataramanan "Ragu" Balakrishnan, the Charles H. Phipps Dean of the Case School of Engineering

鈥淐ollaboration across disciplines is definitely a key motivation, and it was one of the reasons I came to this campus  in the first place,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here is a broad knowledge base here that you can鈥檛 replicate elsewhere.鈥

Dean Balakrishnan also emphasized that critical connectivity, adding that the new department will 鈥渟erve as the focal point of faculty engaging in this evolving field, unifying research efforts and centralizing access to topic experts, making it easier for faculty to collaborate across disciplines.

鈥淐omputer and data science pervades everything we do, with applications from health care to polymers to clean energy, just to name a few,鈥 he continued. 鈥淭his new department provides the structure necessary to meet the needs of our students and faculty, and more broadly, the agility and expertise to advance the discipline itself.鈥 

New department reflects growth

The creation of a separate Computer & Data Sciences Department and a renamed Department of Electrical, Computer and Systems Engineering took effect earlier this year. Both departments are led by interim chairs.

The two distinct, but related, departments will grant degrees specific to their areas in this academic year: computer science and data science and analytics from the new department; electrical engineering, systems and control, and computer engineering from the renamed department.

The number of computer science degrees awarded among students in the Case School of Engineering has nearly tripled over the last decade, in part reflecting dramatic increases in employment opportunities. The Bureau of Labor Statistics forecasts an increase of nearly 550,000 jobs in computer and information technology occupations over the next decade.

In the fall of 2018, more than 400 students were pursuing majors in computer science or computer engineering鈥攁 figure higher than for any other major at the school. Such figures illustrate the national need for professionals in related fields, said James McGuffin-Cawley, senior associate dean and the Arthur S. Holden Professor of Engineering, one of the architects of the plan.

鈥淭his expansion of computer and data sciences, along with a renewed focus for electrical engineering, will help further establish the Case School of Engineering as a leader in these critical areas,鈥 Balakrishnan said.


For more information, contact Mike Scott at mike.scott@case.edu.