Friday, January 31, 2025
Best & Worst Metro Areas for STEM Professionals (2025) - Adam McCann, WalletHub
‘A death penalty’: Ph.D. student says U of M expelled him over unfair AI allegation - Feven Gerezgiher, MPR News
Thursday, January 30, 2025
For AI to make government work better, reduce risk and increase transparency - Valerie Wirtschafter, Brookings
Wednesday, January 29, 2025
Ph.D.-level AI super-agent breakthrough expected very soon - Mike Allen & Jim VandeHei, Axios
We've learned that OpenAI CEO Sam Altman — who in September dubbed this "The Intelligence Age," and is in Washington this weekend for the inauguration — has scheduled a closed-door briefing for U.S. government officials in Washington on Jan. 30. Between the lines: A super-agent breakthrough could push generative AI from a fun, cool, aspirational tool to a true replacement for human workers. Our sources in the U.S. government and leading AI companies tell us that in recent months, the leading companies have been exceeding projections in AI advancement. OpenAI this past week released an "Economic Blueprint" arguing that with the right rules and infrastructure investments, AI can "catalyze a reindustrialization across the country."
Tuesday, January 28, 2025
Super Agent" and THE END Of Human Work - Wes Roth, YouTube
Roth discusses recent rumors and developments in the field of AI, including:
- Mark Zuckerberg's statements on replacing mid-level engineers with AI, and subsequent layoffs at Facebook.
- OpenAI's upcoming announcement of "PhD-level super agents," AI capable of complex human tasks, and its potential impact on various sectors.
- The US government's involvement in AI development, with a focus on national security and the AI arms race with China.
- The potential for AI to lead to catastrophe or improve human life, and the importance of a balanced approach to AI development.
- The role of AI in the workforce, and the potential for job displacement.
- The importance of staying ahead in the AI race, and the potential consequences of falling behind.
Roth also discusses the views of various experts and leaders on AI, including Jake Sullivan, Mark Andreessen, and Leopold Aschenbrenner. He concludes by emphasizing the rapid pace of AI development and the potential for significant changes in the near future.
Monday, January 27, 2025
How Will AI Fundamentally Transform Our Economy? - Anton Korinek, U of Virginia Darden School of Business
AI is about to fundamentally transform our economic system in ways that are comparable to the Industrial Revolution. Just as that earlier transition moved us from the Middle Ages to our modern industrial economy, AI will usher in an entirely new economic paradigm. The technology is rapidly advancing, with the potential to automate both cognitive and physical work across virtually all sectors. Still, there is significant uncertainty about the timeline and extent of these changes. Some experts predict transformative advances within the next year or two, while others expect more gradual changes, in a range of five to 10 years from now. What’s clear is that AI is already affecting productivity and starting to affect labor markets and financial systems.
Sunday, January 26, 2025
ChatGPT’s NEW Task Scheduling Feature is MIND BLOWING (automates any task) - "Rob the AI Guy," YouTube
This video is about the new task feature of ChatGPT. The speaker introduces the feature and how to use it. The speaker also provides six prompts that viewers can start implementing today. The speaker believes that this is the biggest update that OpenAI has ever released. This video shows you how to use OpenAI’s new ChatGPT feature tasks to schedule out tasks in the future. If you want to learn more about ChatGPT’s new feature or how AI agents are changing in 2025 this video is for you.
Saturday, January 25, 2025
SUNY Will Teach Students to ‘Ethically Use AI’ - Johanna Alonzo, Inside Higher Ed
Since the launch of ChatGPT a little over two years ago, universities have struggled to figure out generative artificial intelligence’s place on their campuses. But the State University of New York—which, early on, invested heavily in AI research—has given the technology a place of prominence as a key subject every undergraduate student will be required to study to earn their degree. The university system announced earlier this month that it would adjust one of its “core competencies”—general education requirements that all undergraduate students are required to take—to include education about AI. The change comes alongside others to the system’s general education program, including the addition of a new civic education core competency.
Friday, January 24, 2025
Introduction to Operator & Agents - OpenAI, YouTube
Thursday, January 23, 2025
Education Experts Warn Against Potential Dismantling of U.S. Department of Education - Angela Dennis, Diverse Education
The threat to shut down ED isn’t new, said Dr. James Earl Davis, a professor and endowed chair of education at Temple University. “Since the inception of the US Department of Education in 1979 every Republican presidential candidate, either in the platform or in actions, has proposed the elimination of the department,” said Davis, who moderated the discussion. As a federal agency, ED has had a long-standing role in advancing racial equity in education, added Dr. Cheryl Holcomb-McCoy, the former dean of the College of Education at American University and the recently named CEO and president of the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education.
Wednesday, January 22, 2025
AI agents coming soon to a workplace near you - Emily Peck, Axios
Tuesday, January 21, 2025
Partners Bring Secure Online Education to the Incarcerated - Government Technology
Monday, January 20, 2025
2024 was tough for higher education. 2025 will be tougher - Hans de Wit and Philip G Altbach, University World News
Sunday, January 19, 2025
AI’s next leap requires intimate access to your digital life - Gerrit De Vynct, Washington Post
Tech companies are racing to upgrade chatbots like ChatGPT not only to offer answers, but also to take control of a computer to take action on a person’s behalf. Experts in artificial intelligence and cybersecurity warn the technology will require people to expose much more of their digital lives to corporations, potentially bringing new privacy and security problems. In recent weeks, executives from leading AI companies including Google, Microsoft, Anthropic and OpenAI have all predicted that a new generation of digital helpers termed “AI agents” will completely change how people interact with computers.
https://wapo.st/3CcdkNNSaturday, January 18, 2025
These jobs will disappear fastest by 2030 as AI rises, according to the World Economic Forum - Jennifer Mattson, Fast Company
Bank tellers, cashiers, postal workers, and the jobs of administrative assistants are among those forecast to decline by 2030, according to the World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Report, which was released ahead of the group’s annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland, later this month. In all, the World Economic Forum (WEF) estimates “new job creation and job displacement” will amount to 22% of today’s total jobs, and specifically, 170 million jobs will be created, equivalent to 14% of current employment. This growth is expected to be offset by the loss of 92 million jobs, resulting in a net growth of 78 million jobs by 2030.
Friday, January 17, 2025
Gender balance in computer science and engineering is improving at elite universities but getting worse elsewhere - Joseph Cimpian, the Conversation
Thursday, January 16, 2025
Online Degrees Out of Reach - Liam Knox, Inside Higher Ed
Fewer than half of students at the largest nonprofit online institutions earn a degree after eight years. Is it an unfortunate reality or a cry for accountability? Demand for remote degree programs has surged in the past decade, and especially since the COVID-19 pandemic normalized the online classroom. But for students in many exclusively online programs, eight-year completion rates often fall below 50 percent, according to data on outcome measures from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System. At Southern New Hampshire University, one of the largest and oldest online institutions in the country, only 36 percent of students who enrolled in 2015 graduated in eight years. At Grand Canyon University, four times as many students attend online as in person—100,000 compared to 25,000 at the Phoenix campus this fall. But only 46 percent of the nearly 26,000 online and in-person students who enrolled in 2015 had earned a degree by 2023, according to IPEDS data.
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
Indispensable Instructional Designers at Professional Schools - Patricia Baia, Faculty Focus
IDs can bring transformative benefits to professional schools (programs offering terminal degrees for a specific profession) and support faculty in their endeavors to innovate and engage students. Professional schools, such as pharmacy, medical, dental, law, etc., should consider incorporating instructional designers into their academic teams to boost the quality of education and to help reshape what faculty are doing. Professional schools cater to a diverse student body with varying learning preferences, needs, and accrediting bodies to answer to (Coble, 2015). These adult learners thrive in multimodal contexts which can look like traditional lecture-based settings, hands-on experiential learning, or online coursework. Most importantly, adults need consistency, organization, transparency, and a community (Sockalingam, 2012 & Binder, 2023). Instructional designers are experts who use their flexibility, knowledge, and skills in theory and practice to help faculty adapt to new ways of educating students (Pollard & Kumar, 2022).
Tuesday, January 14, 2025
How to be a better leader in 2025 - Arne Gast, McKinsey
Monday, January 13, 2025
The AI skills you’ll need for 2025: IBM SkillsBuild education forecast - IBM
This trend is common across industries. A new report from IBM reveals that 87% of executives expect jobs to be augmented rather than replaced by generative AI. As for the human element, the challenge today is that about half (47%) of executives say their people lack the knowledge and skills to effectively implement and scale AI across the enterprise. The answer is that we need to invest in education and upskilling to fully reap the benefits of AI. People are crucial to this effort. With that in mind, here are IBM’s three predictions for education in 2025, and the skills we need to build now to prepare.
Sunday, January 12, 2025
Why more colleges are embracing AI offerings - Lilah Burke, Higher Ed Dive
Ever since the public release of ChatGPT in November 2022, artificial intelligence has dominated conversations related to higher education and the future of work in the U.S. Now, some colleges are investing significantly in AI-related programs, from specific degrees to integrating AI literacy into other disciplines. They are doing so for several reasons. Those include responding to predictions that the American workforce will rely on AI much more in the future. For students who would like to work with the development and science of AI, that can mean jobs — some of which are fairly high-paying. For students in other disciplines, that could mean they need to demonstrate AI-related knowledge or competency to land jobs.
https://www.highereddive.com/news/colleges-artificial-intelligence-programs-investments/736196/
Saturday, January 11, 2025
What might happen if the Education Department were closed? - Jill Barshay, et al; Hechinger Report
Friday, January 10, 2025
The end of in-person learning? Setting higher ed’s online goals for 2025 - Joe Ferraro, University Business
Thursday, January 9, 2025
Workforce Pell Grants will create high-paying jobs for more Americans - Linda McMahon, the Hill
Wednesday, January 8, 2025
A ‘hidden liability’: Colleges face up to $950B in capital needs, Moody’s says - Ben Unglesbee, Higher Ed Dive
Tuesday, January 7, 2025
Dubay: Artificial Intelligence will boost productivity in 2025 - Rio Grande Guardian, Luis Montoya
Monday, January 6, 2025
Skipping College: The New Playbook for Successful Careers Without College - Thomas Frey, Future of Education
It has become increasingly evident that many young people are questioning the long-held belief that a traditional four-year college education is the best—or only—path to success. Rising tuition costs, mounting student debt, and uncertain job prospects after graduation have driven a growing skepticism toward the value of a college degree. At the same time, the rapid evolution of technology and shifting demands in the labor market have highlighted the need for skills-based learning and alternative career pathways. This change reflects a broader cultural and economic shift, with more individuals seeking practical, affordable, and efficient ways to enter the workforce. The future of career preparation is evolving, with a focus on building meaningful networks, acquiring hands-on skills, and leveraging personalized education options like trade schools, certifications, online courses, and mentorships. These alternatives not only align better with individual goals but also provide direct, tangible routes to professional success in an ever-changing world.The shifting attitudes toward higher education are being driven by a convergence of economic, professional, and cultural factors. Economically, the skyrocketing cost of college tuition and the resulting student loan crisis have left many young people questioning whether a degree is worth the financial burden.
Sunday, January 5, 2025
Realizing AI Agent Transformation - Venture Beat
Saturday, January 4, 2025
Beyond assistants: AI agents are transforming the paradigm - Venture Beat Staff
https://venturebeat.com/ai/beyond-assistants-ai-agents-are-transforming-the-paradigm/
Friday, January 3, 2025
Microsoft CEO’s Shocking Prediction: “Agents Will Replace ALL Software" - Matt Berman, YouTube
The video discusses Satya Nadella's (Microsoft CEO) prediction that software applications as we know them are going away in favor of agents. This is a huge statement that has vast implications for the future of software development. Specifically, Nadella argues that agents will eventually replace all business applications (including Excel). He believes that the future of software development will be based on agents interacting directly with databases. This means that there will be no need for the traditional application stack, which includes the user interface, business logic, and database. Instead, agents will be able to access and manipulate data directly, without the need for a human to write code. This has significant implications for both businesses and developers. Businesses will need to adapt to this new paradigm by investing in AI and training their employees to use agents. Developers will need to learn new skills and tools in order to create and manage agents. The video also discusses the potential benefits of this shift. Agents can automate many tasks that are currently done by humans, which can free up employees to focus on more strategic work. Additionally, agents can help businesses to make better decisions by providing them with access to more data and insights. (summary assisted by Gemini 1.5)
Thursday, January 2, 2025
Embracing the Future: New England College Takes the Lead in AI Education with New Online Master’s Program in Artificial Intelligence - New England College
In response to the growing global demand for artificial intelligence (AI) expertise, New England College (NEC) has launched a forward-thinking fully online Master of Science in AI degree program. This carefully designed program aims to equip professionals with the advanced skills needed to drive innovation. The new online program provides students with the technical expertise and real-world experience required to lead in AI development and applications. With AI revolutionizing industries from healthcare to finance and technology and a job growth of 32 percent over the past two years, the demand for skilled professionals in this field is at an all-time high. NEC’s AI master’s program offers students the opportunity to gain knowledge in AI, machine learning, data science and neural networks while allowing them to study on their own schedule from anywhere.