With the grand opening of its new building in April 2024, and faculty and staff moved in by that summer, the School of Data Science began a new era heading into the 2024-25 academic year.
“We had a physical presence. I can’t overemphasize how important that was to the establishment of the School,” Dean Phil Bourne said in late 2025.
Along with its new space came new academic milestones, including the first graduates from the School’s doctoral program being hooded in May 2024: Kevin Lin, Saurav Sengupta, and Jiahao Tian.
“Because of the research and writing of Jiahao, of Saurav, of Kevin, someone, somewhere, sometime in the future will collect and analyze data, and they will do it differently because of the work of these students,” said professor Thomas Stewart, director of the Ph.D. program, at the diploma ceremony that spring.
Meanwhile, the master’s program, which had been a cornerstone of data science education at UVA for the preceding decade, was set to be retooled for the evolving times. The changes, announced in fall of 2024 for students matriculating the following year, included adjustments to modernize coursework and a move in the program’s start term from summer to fall.
“You can only do so much by changing the content in the classes to keep things up to date," said Jeffrey Blume, quantitative foundation associate dean for academic and faculty affairs in data science. "You’re still limited by the structure with which you originally organized the program, and that’s what we found we needed to change.”
The School also announced in fall 2024 the creation of a new genomics focus, available to students beginning in 2025, as part of the residential master’s program, thanks to an award from the National Institutes of Health.
Capping off a year marked by expansion and evolution was the announcement in December that Jaffray Woodriff and the Quantitative Foundation were making another sizable donation to UVA to support data science, this time for the construction of an additional building for the School.
“The second building is going to be much more intense with respect to research,” Bourne said. “It’s the next phase of data science,” he added.
In addition to its support of interdisciplinary research, long the beating heart of data science at UVA, the new building will aim to foster entrepreneurial efforts, with the goal of serving not only School of Data Science students but the broader University and community.
“I think that's part of this notion of the future of higher education, at least in my mind, where there are going to be startups, there are going to be entrepreneurs in residence,” Bourne said.
In March 2026, UVA’s Board of Visitors granted initial approval for design of the project, with the new five-story building being connected to the current data science home by an upper-level bridge.
Throughout 2024, the School of Data Science personnel ranks also continued to grow, with three new faculty — Chirag Agarwal, Mai Dahshan, and Nur Yildirim — joining in August and 11 staff members hired across the year. In 2025, the School hired nine new faculty and a dozen more staff to join the growing team.
As he saw the School grow from fewer than 30 employees in its early days to well over 100, Bourne reflected on what impact this could have on the workings and ethos of the School.
This expansion, Bourne said, had both increased research possibilities and eased burdens on previously stretched faculty and staff.
“The emphasis on research is getting even greater as our programs settle in. … The way we started was to actually hire faculty who could teach to fill the educational programs. We now have a bench,” he said, adding that in addition to teaching capabilities, the School was able to focus on the research directions prospective faculty hires would take.
Noting that most professors and employees gravitated to the School of Data Science because of its innovative spirit, Bourne said he wasn’t concerned that the School’s continued growth would compromise its guiding principles of openness, transparency, and interdisciplinarity.
“There is this notion, of course, that as you get bigger, you become more traditional, you fall into old ways. But I think there's a lot of enthusiasm in the School for not doing that. I remain pretty encouraged about where we're headed,” he said.
Another momentous day at the School of Data Science occurred on Aug. 26, 2024, when the inaugural class of data science undergraduate majors arrived at the School’s brand new home for orientation.
The three-year program had been approved less than a year earlier by the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia.
Dean Phil Bourne delivered introductory remarks, highlighting the critical role the 75 second-year UVA data science majors would play in the life and development of the first data science school in the nation.
“We don't want to be the first at being it. We want to be the first at it and be the best. No pressure on you, but that's only going to happen when you perform here, when you perform in your careers going forward,” he said.
With the arrival of the bachelor’s program, the School of Data Science now boasted a full complement of degree programs: an online and residential master’s program; a doctoral program; and an undergraduate major and minor.
The first undergraduate class, which will graduate in 2027, was followed the next year by an even larger cohort of 125 students, with students from across the country and globe.
Just weeks after the first data science majors began their journeys came the announcement that Scott and Beth Stephenson, longtime UVA supporters whose $3 million gift in 2021 led to the establishment of the Stephenson Dean at the School, were donating $10 million to help undergraduates pursuing a bachelor’s degree in data science. Their gift was matched by the University’s Bicentennial Scholars Fund.
Among other benefits, the program would provide 100% support for each Stephenson Scholar’s demonstrated financial need.
“I cannot think of a better way forward, nor better advocates of data science, than the Stephensons. The financial support and mentoring of the Stephenson Scholars will bring forth qualities of leadership in quantitative skills as applied to the needs of society,” Bourne said in a statement when the scholarship was announced.
In a 2024 interview, Scott Stephenson, who has served on the advisory board since 2015 when the School was still the Data Science Institute, explained why he was so excited about the possibilities of the undergraduate program, not only for UVA but for the commonwealth as a whole.
“Imagine if there is a high degree of retention of these bright graduates in the commonwealth of Virginia over an extended period of time, what they will do in terms of new business formation and contributing to the acceleration of preexisting businesses,” he said.
Among the first group of Stephenson Scholars when it was launched in the 2025-26 school year was Huda Mohmand of Woodbridge, Virginia, who is originally from Afghanistan.
“I hope the support as one of the first Stephenson Scholars shapes my journey in data science by allowing me to meet my goals towards improving the world, specifically my own country, Afghanistan, more easily and efficiently,” Mohmand said.
At the inaugural orientation, near the end of his remarks, Bourne emphasized the noble charge that he hoped data science graduates from all backgrounds, regardless of their career goals, would take with them from UVA.
“You're going to become leaders in analytic skills. And this is an institution that's renowned for leadership, and I have no doubts with the faculty you have here that you will become leaders in academic skills. But I want you to think about how you use those skills really to promote data science for the public good and the societal benefit,” he said.
Phil Bourne’s leadership of the School of Data Science, and indeed an animating trait of his career, was an unyielding focus on what’s possible.
It would lead him to develop a protein databank that garnered him international scientific renown, with his overall body of work earning more than 100,000 citations, placing him among the most-cited researchers in UVA history; to success in private industry and academia, including many years spent at the University of California San Diego; to the halls of government where he, in 2014, became the first associate director for data science at the National Institutes of Health. Ultimately, Bourne’s leadership would lead him to UVA, first as director of the Data Science Institute, and then as the founding dean at the first-ever School of Data Science.
“One of the most amazing things about Phil, to me, is when everybody else is thinking about what’s happening today, what’s happening tomorrow, what’s happening next month, he’s always thinking about what’s happening 10 years from now,” said Arlyn Burgess, associate dean for administration at the School of Data Science. Burgess, the first employee of the then Data Science Institute, worked closely with Bourne since his arrival in Charlottesville in 2017.
It’s perhaps not surprising, then, that Bourne conceived and helped spearhead the development of UVA’s Futures Initiative, aimed at positioning the University to proactively respond to rapidly evolving external events over the next decade, including artificial intelligence.
Comprised of a wide range of activities and programming, the initiative’s goal is to leave UVA “in a better place,” according to Bourne.
A little more than a year after its launch, the University would find itself part of a national focus on higher education following a change in presidential administrations in Washington, particularly over the use of diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts. Amid scrutiny from the Justice Department, UVA President Jim Ryan announced his resignation in June 2025.
When reflecting on UVA’s future and the role of higher education in society, Bourne acknowledged the challenges of the past year while striking a hopeful note.
“UVA’s been around for 200 years. It’s going to come out of this and, in some ways, it’ll be stronger,” he said.
A visionary until the end, Bourne also discussed what he believed was needed to position the University for future success amid the transformative and, in some ways, disruptive forces buffeting it, including artificial intelligence.
“The first part is to have a vision. … It’s a charter that everybody gets behind. We don’t have that at the University for AI. It’s just a random set of activities. We don’t yet have it in the School, but we’re moving toward it,” he said, adding that the infrastructure and effective organizational structure are also critical.
In 2025, Bourne was diagnosed with mesothelioma, a rare and aggressive cancer. On March 8, 2026, he died, survived by his wife, Roma; son Scott (Molly); daughter Melanie; and granddaughter Jessica.
His passing reverberated across the University and scientific community.
“Phil’s passion, his leadership and his wonderful ability to share his excitement and bring others into his vision made the School of Data Science all that it is today,” said UVA President Scott Beardsley, who served alongside Bourne many years during his tenure as dean of the Darden School of Business.
Professor Jeffrey Blume, who was tapped as the School’s interim dean, said Bourne “poured his heart and soul into building the School and into the people who make it what it is. The School of Data Science stands today as a reflection of his vision, his energy, and his deep commitment to this community.”
In one of his last interviews before his death, when plans to step down amid failing health were underway, Bourne, a dean who insisted that his office be no larger than any other faculty member’s at the School of Data Science, begged off a question about how he hoped to be remembered, preferring not to think of himself in grandiose terms.
When asked what he was most proud of, however, the answer took no time at all to summon: “Everybody. Everybody at the School.”
The many tributes to Bourne posted on social media and elsewhere in the days that followed often invoked his signature, “Onwards.” While Bourne’s service to the people and School he loved is now complete, his impact and legacy proceeds onwards, toward new discoveries, toward new ideas, and in the lives of generations of students to come.


