A community‑focused AI curriculum goes into its second year
Milwaukee – On July 1, 2026, Associated Banc‑Corp (NYSE: ASB) announced the rollout of the sophomore season of its AI Academy, a summer‑term learning initiative aimed at middle‑ and high‑school students. The program, which debuted as a pilot in 2025, now adopts a more flexible, on‑demand format that lets participants progress through weekly modules at their own pace.
The academy is a joint effort between Associated Bank, the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Milwaukee, and the corporate learning platform Skillsoft. Its goal is to give young learners a foundational grasp of artificial intelligence while simultaneously building financial literacy competencies that are increasingly relevant in a digitized economy.
From pilot to full‑scale offering
The original pilot, run at five Club locations—Davis, Daniels‑Mardak, Fitzsimonds, Hillside, and Mary Ryan—provided a proof point that high school and middle‑school students could absorb technical concepts when the material was tailored to their developmental stage. Recruitment for the 2026 cohort began the week of June 22, and the first content dropped on June 29, signaling a swift transition from enrollment to instruction.
Curriculum structure and delivery
Participants start with an online self‑assessment that routes them to one of three learning pathways, each calibrated to a different baseline of AI knowledge and financial awareness. Over the summer, students receive a new module every Monday, accumulating roughly 90 minutes to two hours of material per week. The content is broken into bite‑sized, interactive lessons optimized for mobile devices, ensuring accessibility whether a learner is at home or on the go.
Core topics
- Fundamentals of artificial intelligence and its operational mechanisms
- Applications of AI in gaming, social media, and entertainment
- Introductory machine‑learning concepts
- Data analysis and predictive thinking techniques
- Basics of budgeting and personal finance
- The influence of AI on banking and corporate finance
- Cyber‑safety and responsible digital behavior
- Ethical considerations surrounding AI deployment
Students earn digital badges as they meet milestones, and “AB Bucks” rewards are dispensed for completed lessons, demonstrated skill gains, optional deep‑dive content, and participation in a final pitch competition.
Leadership perspective
“Artificial intelligence is rapidly reshaping the world around us, and we believe students should have opportunities to develop the skills and understanding needed to navigate that future,” said Terry Williams, Executive Vice President and Chief Information Officer at Associated Banc‑Corp. “The success of last year’s pilot reinforced the importance of creating accessible, engaging learning experiences that help students explore emerging technologies while also building financial confidence and critical thinking skills.”
Williams added that the shift to an on‑demand model reflects direct feedback from families and educators involved in the pilot. “By creating an on‑demand experience, we’re giving participants greater flexibility while maintaining a structured learning journey that encourages continued engagement throughout the summer,” he noted.
Partnerships that power the program
Skillsoft provides the underlying learning‑management infrastructure, enabling the self‑paced delivery model. The Boys & Girls Clubs contribute community outreach and venue support, ensuring that the academy reaches students across diverse socioeconomic backgrounds. Additionally, Associated’s AI and human‑resources specialists worked with Skillsoft to customize the content, while an experienced educator reviewed the curriculum for age‑appropriateness and alignment with educational standards.
Why a bank is investing in AI education
Banks have long been custodians of financial literacy initiatives, but the rise of AI in underwriting, fraud detection, and customer service has broadened the skill set required for future finance professionals. By introducing AI concepts alongside traditional money‑management lessons, Associated Banc‑Corp is positioning itself at the intersection of two critical talent pipelines: technology and finance.
Industry analysts note that community banks are increasingly leveraging education programs to strengthen brand perception and to cultivate a pipeline of future employees who are comfortable with both financial products and the AI tools that are reshaping them. “Embedding AI awareness early can demystify the technology and reduce future regulatory friction,” said a fintech consultant who follows community‑bank outreach trends.
The “Student Pitch Showcase” – a practical capstone
The academy culminates in a “Student Pitch Showcase” slated for later this year. Participants will present project ideas that synthesize their AI knowledge with financial concepts, competing for recognition and potential mentorship opportunities. This format mirrors real‑world fintech hackathons, offering a glimpse into how emerging talent might contribute to the industry’s innovation cycles.
Market implications and broader context
The launch arrives at a moment when regulators are scrutinizing AI use in financial services, emphasizing transparency, bias mitigation, and consumer protection. While the academy does not claim compliance credentials, its emphasis on ethical AI and digital responsibility aligns with the regulatory narrative that responsible AI education should begin early.
Moreover, the program’s partnership model exemplifies a growing trend: financial institutions collaborating with edtech firms to deliver curriculum that bridges the gap between traditional finance and emerging technologies. As AI tools become embedded in everything from loan origination to wealth management, the demand for a workforce fluent in both domains is expected to rise sharply.
Looking ahead
Associated Banc‑Corp plans to monitor engagement metrics, skill‑acquisition rates, and post‑program outcomes to refine the academy for subsequent years. If the model proves scalable, the bank could replicate the initiative in other regions, potentially forging a national network of AI‑focused financial‑literacy hubs.
For now, the second‑year AI Academy represents a concrete step toward equipping the next generation with the dual competencies that will define the future of fintech: technical fluency in artificial intelligence and a solid grounding in financial stewardship.
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