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🧭 AI & Higher-Education Global Brief — Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Institutions are moving beyond experimentation and into structured adoption of AI. Rice University’s new AI Hub and degree programs, paired with the AI Academy’s replicable faculty training model, show how infrastructure and literacy can be aligned. At the same time, global policies — from UNESCO’s guidance to India’s doctoral AI-use rules — highlight the urgency of building both trust and transparency. The lesson is clear: successful AI in higher education depends on linking strategy, faculty development, and governance into one coherent path forward.

🧭 AI & Higher-Education Global Brief — Wednesday, September 10, 2025

As AI moves from pilot projects into everyday tools, real progress depends on faculty capacity. This piece centers instructors co-designing rubrics, syllabus policies, and course workflows—paired with LMS/Workspace integrations and emerging research infrastructure—so platforms amplify learning, integrity, and scholarship rather than replace human judgment.

🧭 AI & Higher-Education Global Brief — Wednesday, September 3, 2025

AI on campus shifted from trial runs to infrastructure. California institutions get free training from Google and Microsoft, Indiana University enables ChatGPT Edu for 120,000 users, and colleges push for clear rules, disclosure, and data safeguards. Plus Latam-GPT for regional access and Pearson study tools at scale.

🧭 AI & Higher-Education Global Brief — Wednesday, August 27, 2025

AI in higher education is no longer confined to pilot projects. This week, UTSA announced the launch of a College of AI, Microsoft integrated Copilot directly into LMS platforms, and universities advanced initiatives on governance, fluency, and student well-being. From new advisory boards to global skilling alliances, the momentum is shifting toward institutional readiness and balanced growth.

🧭 AI & Higher-Education Global Brief — August 20, 2025

Higher education just got a double upgrade. With GPT-5 now the default in ChatGPT and Google’s NotebookLM embedded directly into learning management systems, AI is no longer an optional add-on. It’s sitting inside the same platforms faculty and students use every day. The challenge is no longer if these tools will shape learning, but how ready we are to teach with them in place.

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