Monday, September 1, 2025
Taking AI Welfare Seriously - Robert Long, et al; arXiv
Sunday, August 31, 2025
A ‘Great Defection’ threatens to empty universities and colleges of top teaching talent - Jon Marcus, Hechinger Report
Saturday, August 30, 2025
Anthropic’s Higher Ed AI Board Signals Shift From Tools To Guardrails - Dan Fitzpatrick, Forbes
Friday, August 29, 2025
Are States Prepared for Workforce Pell? - Sara Weissman, Inside Higher Ed
Thursday, August 28, 2025
Ex-Google exec says degrees in law and medicine are a waste of time because they take so long to complete that AI will catch up by graduation - Preston Fore, Fortune
Wednesday, August 27, 2025
At one elite college, over 80% of students now use AI – but it’s not all about outsourcing their work - Germán Reyes, Middlebury, The Conversation
Tuesday, August 26, 2025
Carol Gilbert: A Different Way to Learn - KQED
Do I think all online learning is bad? Certainly not. Using smart educational software, educators can use student data to develop individualized learning programs that include all of the support that students need to be successful. Future online education is anticipated to evolve in a manner that combines virtual reality, artificial intelligence and global cooperation. These advancements hold great promise, but a teacher with whom you connect will always be needed. With a Perspective, I am Carol Gilbert.
Monday, August 25, 2025
'This stuff is moving so quickly': Utah Tech leaders discuss AI, unveil new cybersecurity degree - Nick Fiala, St. George News / KSL
Sunday, August 24, 2025
Does GenAI provide the opportunity for creativity to take centre stage? - Ioannis Glinavos, Times Higher Education
For centuries, universities have delivered scarce expertise. We stacked programmes like layer cakes: first theory, then practice, finally – if there was time – a sprinkle of creativity. Generative AI flips that order. Because routine skills are on tap, the bottleneck shifts upstream to ideation: spotting problems worth solving and framing them so the machine can help.
How should assessors use AI for marking and feedback?
An insider’s guide to how students use GenAI tools
Three reasons to harness AI for interdisciplinary collaboration
That demands divergent thinking, curiosity and ethical judgement – qualities our assessment regimes often squeeze out. We need to treat creativity as a core literacy, not a decorative extra. Don’t get me wrong, skills are not irrelevant – they just look different. Prompt craft, data stewardship and model critique replace manual citation and calculator drills. But they are means, not ends.
Saturday, August 23, 2025
Claude Opus 4 and 4.1 can now end a rare subset of conversations - Anthropic
We recently gave Claude Opus 4 and 4.1 the ability to end conversations in our consumer chat interfaces. This ability is intended for use in rare, extreme cases of persistently harmful or abusive user interactions. This feature was developed primarily as part of our exploratory work on potential AI welfare, though it has broader relevance to model alignment and safeguards. In pre-deployment testing of Claude Opus 4, we included a preliminary model welfare assessment. As part of that assessment, we investigated Claude’s self-reported and behavioral preferences, and found a robust and consistent aversion to harm. This included, for example, requests from users for sexual content involving minors and attempts to solicit information that would enable large-scale violence or acts of terror. Claude Opus 4 showed:
Friday, August 22, 2025
AI Is Designing Bizarre New Physics Experiments That Actually Work - Anil Ananthaswamy, Wired
Although AI has not yet led to new discoveries in physics, it’s becoming a powerful tool across the field. Along with helping researchers to design experiments, it can find nontrivial patterns in complex data. For example, AI algorithms have gleaned symmetries of nature from the data collected at the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland. These symmetries aren’t new—they were key to Einstein’s theories of relativity—but the AI’s finding serves as a proof of principle for what’s to come. Physicists have also used AI to find a new equation for describing the clumping of the universe’s unseen dark matter. “Humans can start learning from these solutions,” Adhikari said.
Thursday, August 21, 2025
Anti-Perfectionist Productivity Coach - There's an AI for That (TAAFT) on Notion
This prompt turns the AI into a high-empathy, anti-perfectionist productivity coach, someone who doesn’t force rigid systems onto messy lives but instead creates flexible, psychologically safe, adaptive frameworks. It’s designed for people who struggle with traditional productivity advice because of real-life unpredictability, resistance patterns, emotional fluctuations, or perfectionistic paralysis. Instead of treating resistance as a flaw, it treats it with curiosity and compassion, helping users map where and why they get stuck, and designing flexible, adaptive plans around their real patterns. The system emphasizes weekly momentum over daily rigidity, deep work tuned to natural energy rhythms, and reflection that prioritizes learning, not self-criticism. Everything in the prompt is built around the core philosophy: progress over perfection, always.
https://taaft.notion.site/Anti-Perfectionist-Productivity-Coach-1e1ed82cbfd380b0a7ead6eed58a0cfa
Wednesday, August 20, 2025
AI in the Classroom: MIT Study Explores ChatGPT and Critical Thinking - University of Louisiana at LaFayette, Distance Learning
Tuesday, August 19, 2025
OpenAI’s Deep Research Agent Is Coming for White-Collar Work - Will Knight, Wired
Monday, August 18, 2025
Why Faculty Hold The Keys To Higher Ed’s AI Digital Transformation - Aviva Legatt, Forbes
Sunday, August 17, 2025
Education as a driving force for self-determination, equity, and the reclamation of knowledge systems - Education International
Marking the International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples (9 August), President Mugwena Maluleke reaffirmed Education International’s commitment to Indigenous Peoples’ right to free, quality, public education that is culturally relevant. On 9 August and every day, Education International (EI) member organisations defend and promote the collective rights of Indigenous educators and students, advocating for their voices to be heard and reflected in the education policies that affect their communities. Education unions also stand as allies to broader movements for land rights, cultural preservation, climate justice, and decolonisation.
Saturday, August 16, 2025
How should higher ed prepare students for a world where AI is everywhere? - Dayton Daily News
The roThe role of education today should be to create broadly literate students who understand how things work, why they work that way, and what the consequences are of inventing and adopting new writing tools. Educators need to face our current moment by teaching the students in front of us and designing learning environments that meet the times, not looking to the past. AI is not to blame for cheating. If students are cheating to get good grades, that is a logical consequence of turning college into diploma factories that churn out workers. We need to rethink that role of college as a degree factory.
Friday, August 15, 2025
OpenAI says they are no longer optimizing ChatGPT to keep you chatting — here’s why - Amanda Caswell, Tom's Guide
Thursday, August 14, 2025
These College Professors Will Not Bow Down to A.I. - Jessica Grose, NY Times
Where does this leave college students? Gen Z is not giving up on the arts or the pleasures of reading and thinking for themselves. As A.I. creates chaos and uncertainty in the market for entry-level jobs, more students may react by following their passion for the humanities; why begrudgingly major in tech or business if it doesn’t even lead to employment? There’s some evidence that humanities departments are rebounding after a long period of decline. U.C. Berkeley, which is considered one of the best public universities in the country, has seen a nearly 50 percent increase in majors in their arts and humanities division over the past four years.
Wednesday, August 13, 2025
OpenAI Announces Massive US Government Partnership - Joe Schiffer and Will Knight, Wired
Tuesday, August 12, 2025
Researchers create ‘virtual scientists’ to solve complex biological problems - Hanae Armitage, Stanford
Stanford Medicine researchers created a team of virtual scientists backed by artificial intelligence to help solve problems in their real-world lab. There may be a new artificial intelligence-driven tool to turbocharge scientific discovery: virtual labs. Modeled after a well-established Stanford School of Medicine research group, the virtual lab is complete with an AI principal investigator and seasoned scientists. “Good science happens when we have deep, interdisciplinary collaborations where people from different backgrounds work together, and often that’s one of the main bottlenecks and challenging parts of research,” said James Zou, PhD, associate professor of biomedical data science who led a study detailing the development of the virtual lab. “In parallel, we’ve seen this tremendous a Researchers create ‘virtual scientists’ to solve complex biological problems - Hanae Armitage, Stanford dvance in AI agents, which, in a nutshell, are AI systems based on language models that are able to take more proactive actions.”