Research points to AI’s growing influence
Research points to AI’s growing influence
If you are sitting on the fence, wondering whether to jump into the land of generative AI, take a look at some recent news – and then jump.
If you are sitting on the fence, wondering whether to jump into the land of generative AI, take a look at some recent news – and then jump.
In a focus group before the pandemic, I heard some heart-wrenching stories from students.
One was from a young, Black woman who felt isolated and lonely. She mostly blamed herself, but the problems went far beyond her. At one point, she said:

We don’t know the last time the first day of classes was canceled.
We’re guessing it was January 1892, when the temperature fell to minus 23, the bottoms of thermometers shattered, and students started using the phrase “froze my bottom off” (or something approximating that).
Something has been happening with class attendance. Actually, there are several somethings, which I’ll get to shortly. First, though, consider, this:
KU’s big jump in freshman enrollment this academic year ran counter to broader trends in higher education.