The podcast argues that AI is ending the university's monopoly on gatekeeping and credentials by providing scalable, high-quality tutoring that was previously too expensive to mass-produce [00:48]. Rather than a sudden collapse, universities face a "slow leak" where degrees become less predictive of capability and alternative, modular credentials gain acceptance [08:18]. The shift moves the focus from passive consumption and compliance to "proof of work," where the ability to ship products and demonstrate judgment becomes the primary currency in the job market [14:53]. To survive, the podcast suggests institutions must pivot from being content delivery systems to becoming "arenas" that offer high-stakes feedback, deep mentorship, and physical learning environments that AI cannot replicate [13:44]. The narrator emphasizes that while information is now abundant, human-centered assets like taste, courage, and the discipline to turn learning into outcomes are the new scarce resources [19:54]. Ultimately, the traditional "learn then live" model is being replaced by a "learn while living" operating system where education is a continuous, daily cycle [18:41]. (summary assistance by Gemini 3 Fast mode)
Monday, March 09, 2026
UNC Charlotte launches AI Accelerator to address classroom challenges, expand emerging AI curriculum - Emmanuel Perkins, Niner Times
UNC Charlotte launches AI Accelerator to address classroom challenges, expand emerging AI curriculum - Emmanuel Perkins, Niner Times
Sunday, March 08, 2026
6 ways to build a strong leadership team in a scary higher ed landscape - Alcindo Donadel, University Business
Public support, financial pressure and questions of workforce relevance aren’t new challenges for higher education leaders, but they’ve never converged so fiercely, according to the latest report from EAB, a consulting firm. “They’re accelerating and exacerbating one another, putting unprecedented strain on the university business model and our margins,” says Brooke Thayer, senior director of research development. A rapidly changing higher education landscape demands organizational agility: Leadership must be prepared to make tough calls while remaining adaptable to emerging threats. “In this environment, the greater risk is not uncertainty itself, but paralysis,” the report reads. “A decision delayed by fear of pushback, controversy or disruption frequently carries higher long-term costs than a decision to act decisively amid ambiguity.”
ASU president Michael Crow pushes AI as education equalizer - Jessica Boehm, Axios
ASU president Michael Crow can't get enough of AI. He consistently uses nine separate platforms, including one he can converse with during his morning hikes. The big picture: To him — a man so "obsessed with the way knowledge was organized" that he spent his undergrad years pulling one book from every classification range in the Iowa State University library — AI is the tireless reference librarian he's always wanted. It's also the great education equalizer, allowing anyone to access anything in a manner they can understand, he said. Why it matters: Crow argues AI can become a force-multiplying, boundary-busting tool — one that helps replace higher education's "industrial" model with more personalized learning.
Saturday, March 07, 2026
As AI upends entry-level job market, California higher ed must adapt now - Zach Justus & Nik Janos, Edsource
California’s public universities have weathered past economic shocks, from the dot-com bust to the Great Recession, by adapting what they teach and how they prepare students for work and civic life. That capacity for adaptation is being tested again by the intersection of artificial intelligence and a new federal earnings test for higher education programs. The specifics are opaque, but the broader trajectory is crystal clear — many California academic departments will be at risk in the coming years unless we act quickly with an emphasis on technology and career placement. Many of our colleagues recoil at the thought of a university degree as vocational training. It does not have to be only that, but a focus on career placement and earnings has to be part of what we are doing in all majors.
Learning in the AI age: Education 5.0 - Patrick Blessinger, LinkedIn
Friday, March 06, 2026
A Comprehensive View of the Role of AI in the University - Ray Schroeder, Inside Higher Ed
OpenAI Reaches A.I. Agreement With Defense Dept. After Anthropic Clash - Cade Metz, NY Times
OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, said on Friday that it had reached an agreement with the Pentagon to provide its artificial intelligence technologies for classified systems, just hours after President Trump ordered federal agencies to stop using A.I. technology made by rival Anthropic. Under the deal, OpenAI agreed to let the Pentagon use its A.I. systems for any lawful purpose. The San Francisco company also said it had found a way to ensure that its technologies would not be applied for domestic surveillance in the United States or with autonomous weapons by installing specific technical guardrails on its systems. But Anthropic said it needed terms that would ensure that its A.I. technology would not be used for domestic surveillance of Americans or for autonomous lethal weapons. The Pentagon, in turn, said a private contractor could not decide how its tools would be used for national security. Their disagreement erupted into public view this month and escalated as both dug in their heels.
Thursday, March 05, 2026
Higher education summit recap: Disruption is here - Alexandra Pecharich, FIU News
“It will completely disrupt every element of humanity more than any other technology or innovation in human history,” FIU trustee Fred Voccola told those in attendance. The founder of two technology firms and the author of a recent book on AI made clear that anyone who does not embrace it will go the way of the dinosaur. “AI allows a human being to become about a hundred to a hundred-and-fifty percent more productive within six weeks,” he said. “That's never happened before. Ever.” Over several hours on two days, speakers shared opinions, experiences and data that made clear how the tech is altering what we know of 21st-century work, life and education and how universities, in particular, will have to adapt.
The Week AI Stopped Asking Permission - Peter H. Diamandis, Metatrends
Wednesday, March 04, 2026
Are You ‘Agentic’ Enough for the AI Era? - Maxwell Zeff, Wired
Silicon Valley has always prized “high-agency” individuals—people who impress their ideas upon the world by thinking for themselves and taking action without being told what to do. But as the performance of AI coding tools has surged, so has the industry’s emphasis on humans being "agentic" themselves. “Today’s agents might already be more capable than all three of us here in the room,” says Akshay Kothari, cofounder and chief operating officer of the $11 billion productivity startup Notion. “Taste is something we think is pretty unique to Notion, but you can imagine agents getting pretty good at that too. Eventually, the only thing left for humans is agency.”
This AI Agent Is Designed to Not Go Rogue - Lily Hay Newman, Wired
Tuesday, March 03, 2026
Doomsday scenario or reality? Mass layoffs fuel fear of AI Armageddon - Jessica Guynn, USA Today
Dr. Aviva Legatt, Forbes Columnist, Founder eGenerative, LinkedIn Posting
I've been tracking AI adoption in higher education for years through my Forbes column — and one thing has become clear: there's no single place to see what institutions are actually doing with AI.