In this video, the future of education is described as a fundamental platform shift where traditional universities must evolve or risk becoming obsolete. Huang argues that because the cost of intelligence is dropping, institutions can no longer rely on their old business model of bundling knowledge, networking, and credentials [02:09]. AI is transforming learning from a slow, expensive "knowledge distribution" process into an "intelligence factory" that is adaptive, personalized, and available 24/7 [02:42]. This shift moves the educational barrier from a student's ability to "do" a task to their ability to know "what" to do and why it matters, prioritizing judgment and curiosity over rote memorization [01:32]. As AI becomes a "force multiplier," the traditional four-year degree is being challenged by a model of continuous, project-based learning. Instead of "front-loading" education before starting a career, learners will use AI as a life-long thought partner to maintain "learning velocity" in an exponentially changing world [17:10]. The universities that survive will move away from being content providers and instead become "crucibles" for high-stakes practice, ethics, and character building—areas where human mentorship and social proof remain irreplaceable [08:19]. Ultimately, the video suggests that the rarest and most valuable skills in the AI era are not information retrieval, but "taste," "direction," and the courage to frame and solve complex, real-world problems [24:04]. (Gemini 3 assisted with summary)
Professional, Continuing, and Online Education Update by UPCEA
Daily updates of news, research and trends by UPCEA
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Tuesday, January 27, 2026
Using ChatGPT isn't an AI strategy - Daphne Kohler, Big Think
Designing the 2026 Classroom: Emerging Learning Trends in an AI-Powered Education System - Grace Goldstone, Faculty Focus
Monday, January 26, 2026
Agents, robots, and us: Skill partnerships in the age of AI - Lareina Yee, et al; McKinsey Global Institute
AI is expanding the productivity frontier. Realizing its benefits requires new skills and rethinking how people work together with intelligent machines. Work in the future will be a partnership between people, agents, and robots—all powered by AI. Today’s technologies could theoretically automate more than half of current US work hours. This reflects how profoundly work may change, but it is not a forecast of job losses. Adoption will take time. As it unfolds, some roles will shrink, others grow or shift, while new ones emerge—with work increasingly centered on collaboration between humans and intelligent machines.
https://www.mckinsey.com/mgi/our-research/agents-robots-and-us-skill-partnerships-in-the-age-of-ai
AI Won't Replace You: This will - There's an AI for That, YouTube
Reimagining the value proposition of tech services for agentic AI - McKinsey
Sunday, January 25, 2026
Women far outnumber men in law school, med school, vet school and other professional programs - Jon Marcus, Hechinger Report
Harnessing AI to expand scientific discovery - Hongliang Xin, Times Higher Ed
From drug design to climate modelling, artificial intelligence can process data at scales far beyond human capacity. Hongliang Xin argues that the future of research lies in harnessing agentic AI through human-guided discovery, When it comes to generative artificial intelligence, or GenAI for short, I am an optimist. Sure, universities need to be cautious. The technology is powerful, fast-moving and, in the wrong hands, potentially risky. AI – especially the emerging class of agentic AI, systems that can assist with complex tasks such as setting goals and making decisions – is not a threat to scholarship if meaningful human oversight and control over important decisions is maintained. In fact, it is an opportunity to extend it far beyond what we humans could achieve alone.
AI has moved into universities’ engine room, but no one is at the controls - Tom Smith, Times Higher Ed
Saturday, January 24, 2026
Celebrating Faculty Strengths and Differences: A Positive Strategy for Thriving Academia - Maureen Hermann, Faculty Focus
AI and the Art of Judgment - Art Carden, EconLib
FETC 2026: How CTE and AI Are Defining the Future of Learning - Amy Mcintosh, Ed Tech
Friday, January 23, 2026
Four ways artificial intelligence (AI) takes shape at CWRU—and across higher education - Brianna Smith, Case Western News
6,000 Minnesota students go to online learning due to immigration actions - Imani Cruzen, Pioneer Press
A new direction for students in an AI world: Prosper, prepare, protect - Mary Burns, Rebecca Winthrop, Natasha Luther, Emma Venetis, and Rida Karim, AP
Thursday, January 22, 2026
Ads Are Coming to ChatGPT. Here’s How They’ll Work - Maxwell Zeff, Wired
How course-sharing improved Adrian College’s bottom line - Alcino Donadel, University Business
Building leaders in the age of AI - Bob Sternfels, Børge Brende, and Daniel Pacthod, McKinsey
Artificial intelligence can write, design, code, and complete tasks at breakneck speed. It can help business leaders draft emails, create agendas, and quickly prepare for important meetings and difficult discussions. It can do all of that with just a few voice commands—but it still can’t do the hard work of leadership itself. Generative AI cannot set aspirations, make tough calls, build trust among stakeholders, hold team members accountable, or generate truly new ideas. That work remains deeply human—and more important to get right than ever before, given the scope of change and uncertainty with which today’s organizations are dealing.
Wednesday, January 21, 2026
Affective Intelligence in Artificial Intelligence - Ray Schroeder, Inside Higher Ed
Microcredentials Explosion Is Imminent And What It All Means - Neil Wolstenholme, FE News
A very significant structural shift in British education since the expansion of universities in the 1990s is imminent. While the headlines focus on tuition fees or teacher retention, a more profound revolution is taking place – one that challenges the very monopoly of the three-year degree The imminent explosion of microcredentials is a policy inevitability. With the rollout of the Lifelong Learning Entitlement in 2025, the UK Government will effectively decouple funding from the “full degree,” allowing learners to borrow money for individual modules and short courses. This legislative change is the spark that will ignite the powder keg. For the first time, the “atomisation” of education – that is breaking learning down into stackable, verifiable blocks – will have the financial backing of the State.