Colleges and universities are making permanent decisions about artificial intelligence, often faster than governance structures can keep up. Graduation standards, assessments, and administrative practices are shifting, sometimes without clear faculty involvement. This issue focuses on what is at stake when those decisions move forward without shared governance, and why waiting to act carries its own risks.
Tag: teaching and learning
This week’s AI & Higher-Education Global Brief explores how universities are moving from experimentation to accountability. Featured research highlights a growing demand for governance frameworks that balance innovation with integrity. From faculty readiness and AI-tool adoption to student writing and accreditation reform, the focus is shifting toward strategy, not novelty. Institutions are now being called to demonstrate measurable responsibility in how AI shapes teaching, learning, and policy—signaling a defining moment for higher education’s digital maturity.
