This series of lectures was established in 2012 to celebrate the 85th anniversary of Donald Cecil's birth by the contribution of the Cecil family and it will help to support the purchasing academy's art management curriculum. This donation lecture reflects Cecil's hard work on outstanding education, business leadership, and artistic enthusiasm. It is awarded annually and is awarded the Jandon Business Art Student Achievement Award. This is awarded to students of the Bachelor of Arts Program. The theme of the buff lecture is "Learning at work - Case study of art exhibitions", which is closely related to her career. She was a Project Director of Cal Performances at the University of California, Berkeley and served as Director of the National Outreach Program at WNET Public Television Art Series in New York.
Recently I was asked to give a lecture on the skills I need in the future. The lecture is for the general audience, mainly for students. Our idea is to provide guidance on what students should learn today so that they can compete and succeed ten years from now. In recent years, I have given some similar lectures. We usually talk about automation, digitization, artificial intelligence, formal modeling, and data science. I will talk about extreme global competition and specialization. I will talk about potential cooperation and conflict between humans and robots. All these problems require new skills. However, even if you acquire these skills, success is not guaranteed. Just last week, Kiev economics university recruitment committee deleted candidates from candidates for senior management positions due to rumors of ethics violation thirteen years ago.