By Janice Phelan,
September 28, 2023
Thanks to a public school district-higher education partnership, the main hallway
of the Missouri Innovation Campus in Lee's Summit will be traveled, beginning next
summer, by students enrolled in the new Bachelor of Science in Data Science program.
Beginning next year, the Missouri Innovation Campus (MIC) program will launch a highly
sought-after bachelor’s degree combining artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning
and data science. The Bachelor of Science in Data Science will start in summer 2024,
said Stan Elliott, MIC program director, and is offered through the MIC program’s
partners – the ŷƵ, Lee’s Summit R-7 School District and
Metropolitan Community College.
In January 2023, Elliott said he began hearing requests for the new degree from the
MIC program’s business partners.
“The business partners were asking if UCM had an AI program and, if so, when would
interns be available for the Kansas City region’s workforce as the AI push was growing
at a fast pace,” Elliott said. “With the Data Science BS degree program starting in
June 2024, interns in the MIC program would be available in June 2025 when they begin
their paid, three-year, year-round internship with one of our over 70 MIC business
partners.”
The new MIC program will be chaired by Dr. Belinda Copus, UCM assistant professor
and chair for the UCM Department of Computer Science and Cybersecurity.
“The BS Data Science degree was created to address the region’s needs to make vast
streams and stores of data sensible and actionable across many domains, public and
private,” Copus said. “We will provide the workforce with graduates who have both
the theoretical knowledge and the practical skills to better inform decisions, make
new discoveries and increase data’s value. I can think of no better partner than the
MIC program to enable accelerated delivery of formal classroom instruction coupled
with hands-on, real-world learning opportunities. We look forward to bringing this
innovative delivery of our program to fruition.”
Since the Missouri Innovation Campus program began in 2012, the goal of this one-of-a-kind
initiative has been to keep information technology and engineering talent within the
Kansas City area, decrease the cost of a college degree, reduce the time it takes
to earn a bachelor’s degree, eliminate the skills gap and provide a real-world learning
experience through three-year, paid internships.
Currently, 90 percent of the MIC program graduates go to work for the company they
interned with, keeping workforce talent in the region, Elliott said.
“The first MIC program cohort that can take advantage of the new Data Science degree
program will be the 2024-28 cohort that will start after their sophomore year in high
school and will graduate in May 2028 from UCM – only two years after graduating from
high school,” he added. “And since they receive their first two years of college tuition
free, our students graduate with little to no debt.”
Students enter the MIC program the summer before their junior year in high school
when they begin attending Lee’s Summit R-7’s Summit Technology Academy. The students
take college-level classes from UCM and Metropolitan Community College alongside their
high-school courses. This places the MIC students on an accelerated pathway to complete
their UCM bachelor’s degree just two years after high-school graduation. The program
has received national recognition for reshaping the path to a college degree.
In addition to the Bachelor of Science in Data Science, the Missouri Innovation Campus
program includes pathways to BS degrees in Drafting and Design Technology, Computer
Science, Cybersecurity, Software Engineering, Business Administration in Big Data/Business
Analytics and Business Administration in Computer Science Information Systems.
For more information, visit the MIC program webpage.