The analysis included 35 studies published between 2022 and 2024, involving 4193 participants. The results indicated a moderately positive effect of ChatGPT on student learning outcomes (g = 0.670), significantly enhancing both cognitive and non-cognitive skills. In the analysis of moderating variables, the subject, experimental duration, and instructional mode had significant positive effects on student learning outcomes, whereas educational level and knowledge type did not show significant effects. Additionally, the publication bias test revealed no significant publication bias. This meta-analysis confirmed the effectiveness of ChatGPT in improving student learning outcomes and highlighted the roles of the subjects, experimental duration, and instructional mode as key moderating factors. Despite the risks of sample selection bias and limitations in fully covering the multidimensional moderating factors and higher-order thinking, the findings provided important empirical support for applying ChatGPT in education.
Thursday, April 02, 2026
Cloning Myself with AI: Four Ways to Multiply Faculty Presence for Graduate and Adult Learners - Sherrie Myers Bartell, Faculty Focus
Have you ever wished you could clone yourself? I have. For many faculty in graduate and adult education that longing is more than a passing thought. Balancing the multifaceted needs of students who rely on your expertise, guidance, and presence often feels impossible. While teaching realities mean we can’t be everywhere at once, AI offers practical ways to extend our reach, enabling high-touch interactions even as responsibilities multiply. Thoughtfully leveraged, these tools help orchestrate a more responsive classroom by offering prompt feedback, facilitating richer discussions, and generating tailored resources, all while preserving the essential human connection at the heart of meaningful learning.
Wednesday, April 01, 2026
What Comes After an MBA? Why Leaders Are Turning to AI - Boston University Virtual
The MBA is the defining credential for a generation of business leaders. It builds financial acumen, strategic thinking, and cross-functional fluency — the toolkit for managing complexity and driving organizational performance. For decades, it was the answer to the question every ambitious professional eventually asked: What’s my next move? That question is back. And for a growing number of leaders, the answer looks different than it once did. AI is not just changing the tools organizations use. It is changing how decisions get made, how processes run, who is accountable for outcomes, and what it means to lead. Business leaders with MBAs are finding themselves navigating a new kind of gap — not a lack of strategic instinct, but a lack of structured fluency in an AI-driven operating environment. And a targeted, business-focused Master’s degree in Artificial Intelligence is increasingly the credential they’re turning to.
https://www.bu.edu/online/2026/03/23/what-comes-after-an-mba-why-leaders-are-turning-to-ai/
Terafab: The World’s Next Generation Chip Factory - Thomas Frey, Futurist Speaker
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
Leading disruption before it leads you - McKinsey
The riskiest disruption isn’t necessarily the one coming. It may be the one CEOs refuse to lead.Today’s leadership mandate requires more than long-term strategy. In a recent interview with McKinsey’s Eric Kutcher, IBM CEO Arvind Krishna had advice for fellow leaders: “You’ve got to be willing to ‘do’: As opposed to getting disrupted by somebody else, disrupt yourself while you still have the cash flow and clients who value your capabilities.” That same urgency runs through recent conversations with CEOs on AI. Sanofi CEO Paul Hudson has been clear that this revolution can’t be delegated to a task force or tucked neatly under “innovation.” It requires CEO ownership. Meanwhile, Citi CEO Jane Fraser has argued that the goal of AI transformation isn’t automation layered onto old workflows—but redesign from the ground up.
https://www.mckinsey.com/featured-insights/themes/leading-disruption-before-it-leads-you
University of Phoenix scholars publish study on academic applications of generative AI tools in higher education - University of Phoenix
- Generative AI tools are increasingly used in academic workflows, including literature review support, research brainstorming, and academic writing assistance.
- AI can improve research efficiency and idea generation, particularly for complex scholarly tasks such as synthesizing large bodies of literature.
- Ethical and academic integrity considerations remain critical, including transparency about AI use and maintaining original scholarly analysis.
- Doctoral education may benefit from AI literacy training, helping researchers understand both the capabilities and limitations of generative AI technologies.
- Institutions may need clearer policies and guidance to support responsible AI adoption in research and teaching.
Monday, March 30, 2026
Survey: How Should Universities Prepare for the AI Era? - Institute for the Future of Education
US universities pivot to AI degrees as campuses race to match the machine age - Times of India Education
Sunday, March 29, 2026
Exploring the connections between integrated sustainable curricula, generative AI tools, and perceived climate change capabilities across the global south and north using multi-analytics - Javed Iqbal, et al; Nature
How Cal State Became Ground Zero for the Fight over AI in Higher Education - Chris Mills Rodrigo, TechPolicy
Saturday, March 28, 2026
Report Outlines Framework for University’s Engagement with AI - Alec Gallimore & Ricardo Henao, Duke Today
All Jobs Gone within 18 Months: Microsoft’s AI Chief Terrifying Prediction Explained - AIGrid
This podcast discusses the imminent impact of AI on the white-collar workforce, highlighting predictions from Microsoft’s AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman and Anthropic's Dario Amodei that most professional tasks could be automated within the next 12 to 18 months [00:00]. It explores the "quiet" nature of current job displacement, where data shows a significant drop in white-collar job openings since 2015 [03:22], and notes a 16% fall in employment among workers aged 22 to 25 in AI-exposed fields [11:18]. The video also covers legislative efforts to protect professions like law and medicine by banning AI from providing substantive professional advice [06:30]. The discussion further details a "chaotic" transition period predicted by Gartner, where companies may prematurely replace staff with AI only to rehire humans later due to service quality collapses [13:18]. As AI literacy becomes a formal credential, the labor market is expected to shift toward requiring "AI-free" skills assessments to verify human critical thinking [14:53]. While some firms like Klarna have already moved toward AI-first models, the podcast suggests the displacement will not be a straight line but a messy cycle of experimentation and correction [14:25]. [Summary facilitated by Gemini 3 Fast]
Friday, March 27, 2026
Measuring progress toward AGI: A cognitive framework - Ryan Burnell & Oran Kelly, the Keyword, Google
Our framework draws on decades of research from psychology, neuroscience and cognitive science to develop a cognitive taxonomy. It identifies 10 key cognitive abilities that we hypothesize will be important for general intelligence in AI systems:
Perception: extracting and processing sensory information from the environment
Generation: producing outputs such as text, speech and actions
Attention: focusing cognitive resources on what matters
Learning: acquiring new knowledge through experience and instruction
Memory: storing and retrieving information over time
Reasoning: drawing valid conclusions through logical inference
Metacognition: knowledge and monitoring of one's own cognitive processes
Executive functions: planning, inhibition and cognitive flexibility
Problem solving: finding effective solutions to domain-specific problems
Social cognition: processing and interpreting social information and responding appropriately in social situations
Sovereign AI: Building ecosystems for strategic resilience and impact - McKinsey
Sovereign AI is achievable only through an ecosystem effort that connects energy, compute, data, models, platforms, and applications across multiple actors. Sovereign AI refers to a nation’s or organization’s ability to develop and control its own AI capabilities to ensure strategic independence and alignment with domestic values and laws. That said, sovereign AI does not have a single definition; rather, it is the result of the interaction between four distinct components: