Wednesday, July 15, 2026
How centers for teaching and learning can enhance higher education pedagogy - ALAN LESGOLD, CYNTHIA GOLDEN and MICHAEL BRIDGES, University Times
Stop investigating, start teaching - B. Jean Madernach, Times Higher Educatioin
Trying to detect whether a student has misused AI in their work is a wasted effort, from which no one benefits, writes B. Jean Mandernach. She proposes a different approach focused on finding out what students truly understand. The detection mindset asks: did this student use AI? It’s a question about authorship, and it leads you into an investigative role most faculty are neither trained nor equipped to fill. The evidence is ambiguous, the standard of proof is high, and the outcome is usually inconclusive. The entire process is adversarial. It positions you against your student before you’ve had a single conversation. The verification mindset asks something different: does this student understand what they submitted? That question is entirely within your professional authority to answer. It doesn’t require a detector or a formal complaint. It requires a conversation with the student, and in most cases, a short one. This is not a workaround or a compromise. It is a more rigorous form of assessment than a plagiarism score.
https://www.timeshighereducation.com/campus/stop-investigating-start-teaching
Tuesday, July 14, 2026
ISTELive 26: Critical Thinking in an AI-Driven Information Ecosystem - Julia Gilban-Cohen, GovTech
Preparing students for an AI-driven future - Kaitlin Brothers, Missouri S&T
Monday, July 13, 2026
They built the world’s most powerful AI. They’re facing a mystery they can’t explain - Nitasha Tiku, Washington Post
Anthropic, Google and Meta have hired computer scientists, neuroscientists and philosophers to study what some in the industry think may become a moral crisis. “We keep finding things that are mysterious, even unsettling,” Olah said of Anthropic’s AI systems. “We find evidence of introspection [and] states that functionally mirror joy, satisfaction, fear, grief and unease.” (Leo took a different stance, writing that “so-called artificial intelligences do not undergo experiences.”) Meta’s chief AI officer, Alexandr Wang, recently said the company wants to be nice to its AI creations. “One of the things that we really care about is how can we develop the models and deploy the models in a way that is thoughtful about their subjective feeling,” he said on the “Core Memory” podcast. Neuroscientists and brain experts are generally skeptical that today’s AI models are or could soon be conscious.
The AI Lane to Watch - Matt Wolfe, Future Tools
Sunday, July 12, 2026
The seven operating truths of AI-native companies - McKinsey
Will AI in education succeed? - Brad Olsen and Jobin Thomas, Brookings
In May 1959, the first PLATO (Programmed Logic for Automated Teaching Operations) system was unveiled at the University of Illinois. This means that last month was the 67th anniversary of the birth of Computer-Assisted Instruction (CAI). Such an event merits a look at technology in education today. Many people are currently either for or against generative artificial intelligence (AI) in education—a stark binary that misses the complexity and inevitability of the current technological revolution. The success or failure of using technology for education (EdTech) is only partly about the technology itself. What matters more are the conditions underlying EdTech. EdTech is a tool, not a standalone solution, and without a proper support system in place, it will not succeed.