Tag: higher education leadership

Podcast: Season 6: Episode 8 – The Agentic Trap: When AI Acts on Behalf of Students

In this critical briefing, we confront “The Agentic Trap.” Moving beyond AI as a simple drafting tool, higher education now faces autonomous systems capable of logging into platforms, completing coursework, and generating complex behavioral records without human input. We analyze new reporting from California and the UK, detailing the serious risk this poses not just to academic integrity, but to the very foundation of the educational record. Discover what agentic AI means for online learning compliance, why sovereign AI infrastructure is essential, and how institution leaders must audit their systems to ensure verified human learning remains central.

AI & Higher-Education Global Brief: The Cognitive Drift – Hallucinating with Machines

Global higher education is entering a new accountability phase. Evidence from the OECD signals “learning reversals” when AI is used without structured pedagogical design, while institutions integrating AI as a guided learning partner are reporting stronger retention and engagement. At the same time, the rapid rise of the Chief AI Officer reflects a shift from experimentation to executive-level governance. The central question is no longer access to AI, but whether institutions can convert AI usage into durable intellectual fluency backed by auditable oversight.

AI & Higher-Education Global Brief:  The Agentic Trap – When AI Acts on Behalf of Students

This week’s AI & Higher-Education Global Brief highlights a decisive shift from experimentation to institutionalization. Across campuses, leaders are confronting mounting governance pressure, faculty workload strain, and assessment integrity concerns as AI adoption accelerates. The stories reveal a clear pattern: sustainable integration now depends less on tool deployment and more on policy clarity, infrastructure maturity, and faculty capacity building.

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