Many schools launching AI courses in Hungary

Sixty Hungarian schools offer AI courses this academic year, Balázs Hankó, the minister of culture and innovation, told a press conference on Tuesday.

Over 1,000 students have signed up for the courses, the minister said, adding that the government’s goal is to ensure similar courses to all students in vocational training from the next semester. The government seeks to make AI an integral part of the curriculumm to further strengthen the country’s competitiveness, Hankó said.

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The minister added that three schools out of the total 60 are in ethnic Hungarian communities in neighbouring countries because “the government thinks in terms of the whole of the Carpathian Basin”. Hankó said that 60 teachers had received AI training, so “nearly all vocational training centres have teachers that have basic AI skills”.

Concerning the courses, Hankó said they were organised based on the Logiscool system, developed by a small Hungarian company and used in 30 countries, ensuring AI training to a total 300,000 people. AI courses, he added, could make Hungary a “vocational training superpower”.

AI training must also become an integral part of Hungary’s higher education, Hankó said, adding that the idea was to provide basic courses at first with specialised courses to follow at MA level.

The minister also said that the first AI conference of Hungarian universities and colleges will be held at Veszprém’s Pannon University this autumn.

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Ministry, business chamber bring roadshow to vocational schools

The Culture and Innovation Ministry and the Hungarian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (MKIK) are taking a roadshow to vocational schools around the country to promote the benefits of entrepreneurship, the state secretary for higher education and vocational training said at a press conference on Tuesday.

Veronika Varga-Bajusz said presentations and seminars were being organised with the cooperation of vocational training centres in 21 cities around the country from September till December.

MKIK chief secretary Ákos Csókay said around 50 of the participants could be selected to join a three-month mentor programme and five could get support to set up their own businesses.

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