| The 
			Climate Corporation invests in combined computer and crop sciences 
			major at Illinois
 
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            [May 04, 2019]  
			Technology in the agricultural industry continues to 
			expand, and with it, the demand for employees prepared to work for 
			agricultural companies. In an effort to build a talent pipeline, The 
			Climate Corporation (Climate), a subsidiary of Bayer, made a 
			$500,000 investment in a new major at the University of Illinois. 
			Leading the digital agriculture revolution, the university launched 
			a first-of-its-kind major combining computer sciences and crop 
			sciences, which the Climate gift benefits. | 
        
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			 Climate’s gift, which will provide scholarships to 
			students in the new program, stretches over a five-year period and 
			specifically aims to help grow the program. 
 “The Climate Corporation is thrilled to partner with the University 
			of Illinois, a leading institution with world-class strength in crop 
			and plant sciences, data science, and engineering,” says Sam 
			Eathington, chief science officer for The Climate Corporation. “We 
			view the new major as an important mechanism through which the next 
			generation will be trained. With our partnership, we aim to help 
			accelerate growth at the interface of these disciplines because 
			that’s where transformational breakthroughs occur.”
 
 The undergraduate major, known as CS + CPSC and housed in the 
			Department of Crop Sciences, admitted its first class of students in 
			the fall. Over the next several years, the program is set to meet 
			its capacity of 60 to 80 full-time students. It is one of several 
			interdisciplinary computer science majors at Illinois, but CS+CPSC 
			is the first to receive a significant investment from a private 
			donor.
 
			
			 
			“This investment proves that graduates of CS + CPSC 
			will be well prepared and highly sought-after by seed, machinery, 
			and technology companies in addition to large farming organizations, 
			startups, and academia,” says Rashid Bashir, dean of the College of 
			Engineering at Illinois.  
			
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The new major and Climate’s investment comes at a crucial moment in agriculture, 
given the industry’s growing reliance on technology and data in applications 
such as quantitative genetics, statistical programming, data science, study of 
weather and climate, GIS-based data gathering, and remote sensing. 
 
“CS + CPSC graduates will leverage their excellent analytical training to help 
secure the world’s food supply in the face of a changing climate and a growing 
population,” says Kim Kidwell, dean of the College of Agricultural, Consumer and 
Environmental Sciences at Illinois. “Climate’s investment signals their 
recognition of the importance of technology in production agriculture and builds 
the human capital needed to tackle the challenge.”
 Students can learn more about the CS+CPSC program by requesting information or 
scheduling a personalized visit at
https://go.illinois.edu/CS_CPSC 
_info.
 
				 
			[University of Illinois College of 
			ACES] |