Admissions scandal shines a harsh light on the ‘product’ of higher ed
Admissions scandal shines a harsh light on the ‘product’ of higher ed
We can glean many lessons from the most recent college admissions scandal.
We can glean many lessons from the most recent college admissions scandal.
I’ve been doubtful about the emergence of a Generation Z. Strangely, Harry Potter and Katniss Everdeen, along with some reassurances from Pew Research, have me reconsidering.
Enrollment at Kansas regents universities declined again this year. I say again because enrollment has declined each year since 2011.
Distilling hundreds of comments about the future of the university into something manageable and meaningful is, in understated terms, a challenge.
By Doug Ward
We need to talk.
Yes, the conversation will make you uncomfortable. It’s important, though. Your students need your guidance, and if you avoid talking about this, they will act anyway – usually in unsafe ways that could have embarrassing and potentially harmful consequences.
So yes, we need to talk about generative artificial intelligence.
The headlines about KU’s fall enrollment sounded much like a Minnesotan’s assessment of winter: It could be worse.
Indeed it could have been, given the uncertainties brought on by the coronavirus and rumblings among students that they might sit out the year if their courses were online.
The future of higher education may very well hinge on our skill as interpreters and communicators.
Too often, though, we never bother to define the terms we use or to help students, parents, and employers understand the purpose and significance of a college education, Ashley Finley told participants at the 2021 KU Teaching Summit last week.
The latest enrollment report for universities in the Kansas regents system (down 1.5%) seems worth little more than a shrug. Longer term, though, the higher education trends in Kansas will require considerable attention – and action.
Nearly a decade ago, the Associated Press began distributing articles written by an artificial intelligence platform.
Not surprisingly, that news sent ripples of concern among journalists. If a bot could turn structured data into comprehensible – even fluid – prose, where did humans fit into the process? Did this portend yet more ominous changes in the profession?
Since its release late last year, ChatGPT has reverberated through the academic mind like an orchestral crescendo in a Strauss symphonic movement. It has amazing abilities, and even greater potential. Even so, it delivers many of its responses in a monotone reminiscent of HAL 9000, the rogue artificial intelligence system in 2001: A Space Odyssey.