Anant Agarwal, Chief Executive Officer at Grady

Anant Agarwal

Chief Executive Officer

Professor, MIT

Anant Agarwal is the CEO of Grady, the AI grading and feedback platform built by university faculty to improve teaching and learning in higher education.

As CEO, Agarwal leads all aspects of Grady's business and sets its strategic direction, while advancing the company's mission of helping educators do more of what they got into teaching to do, by easing the time pressures that keep even the most dedicated instructors and TAs from reaching every student as fully as they would like. He also serves as the Chairman of Grady's Board of Directors.

Agarwal was the Founder and CEO of edX, and Chief Academic Officer of 2U after its acquisition of edX for $800M. He remains a Senior Advisor to the organization. edX is a leading global learning platform expanding access to high-quality education for everyone, everywhere. As the first educator to teach an edX course on circuits and electronics from MIT, Agarwal drew 155,000 students from 162 countries.

He remains a professor of electrical engineering and computer science at MIT. Previously, he served as the director of CSAIL, MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.

Agarwal is a successful serial entrepreneur, having co-founded several companies including Tilera Corporation, which created the Tile multicore processor, and Virtual Machine Works. He has received multiple accolades over the years for his pursuit of great educational innovation. He won the Maurice Wilkes prize for computer architecture and MIT's Smullin and Jamieson prizes for teaching. He is also the 2016 recipient of the Harold W. McGraw, Jr. Prize for Higher Education, which recognized his work in advancing the MOOC movement. Additionally, Agarwal is a recipient of the Padma Shri Award from the President of India and was named the Yidan Prize Laureate for Education Development in 2018.

A pioneer in computer architecture, Agarwal is a member of the National Academy of Engineering, a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a fellow of the ACM. Scientific American selected his work on organic computing as one of 10 World-Changing Ideas in 2011, and he was named in Forbes' list of top 15 education innovators in 2012.

Agarwal held a Guinness World Record for the largest microphone array, is an author of the textbook "Foundations of Analog and Digital Electronic Circuits," and in his spare time he hacks on WebSim, an online circuits laboratory. He holds a Ph.D. from Stanford and a bachelor's from IIT Madras.