OpenAI's Education Push: 500,000 Students Get ChatGPT Access at Cal State
The largest ChatGPT deployment in education history just landed, and I've got mixed feelings about what it means for how we train the next generation.
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When I started at Kuka back in the early 2000s, the training program was brutal. Six months of reading manuals, shadowing senior engineers, and making mistakes on decommissioned units before anyone let you near a production line. You learned by doing, by failing, by having someone who'd been there twenty years tell you exactly why your approach wouldn't work.
Now OpenAI just announced they're giving ChatGPT access to 500,000 students and faculty across the California State University system. It's the largest deployment of the technology in education to date, according to OpenAI's blog. The stated goal is to "help the United States build an AI-ready workforce."
Look, here's the thing. I'm not a Luddite. I've seen automation transform manufacturing floors for the better. But this feels different.
What's Actually Happening
The CSU system spans 23 campuses. That's a lot of engineering students, business majors, and everyone in between who'll now have institutional access to AI assistance. OpenAI's framing this as expanding opportunity, democratizing access to tools that were previously only available to those who could afford subscriptions or had the technical know-how to access them.
They've also launched something called ChatGPT Futures, a program spotlighting 26 student "innovators" from the Class of 2026 who are apparently using AI for research and, in their words, "real-world impact." The announcement reads like a press release, which it basically is.
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