Professional, Continuing, and Online Education Update by UPCEA
Daily updates of news, research and trends by UPCEA
Click on the URL at the end of posting to visit the relevant article or website mentioned in the post.
Saturday, December 13, 2025
Artificial Intelligence Streamlines Higher Ed Admissions - Alexander Slagg, EdTech
The Quantum Barrier Just Shattered And Nobody’s Talking About It - Julia McCoy, YouTube
As Insta-Gen Z take to microlearning, HEIs are adopting new programme modules - Education Times
Friday, December 12, 2025
S&P: Negative outlook for nonprofit colleges in 2026 - Ben Unglesbee, Higher Ed Dive
Education in the Age of Artificial Intelligence: the Need for Deliberate Design - Flen Depaepe and Jan Elen, Education International
A free version of ChatGPT built for teachers - OpenAI
Thursday, December 11, 2025
Micro-credentials need to be part of national frameworks - Sjur Bergan, University World News
Why higher education cannot leave AI governance to industry - Looi Chee Kit and Wong Lung Hsiang, University World News
In June 2025, AI research firm Anthropic released a striking study that should concern every policy-maker, technologist and university leader. Sixteen of the world’s most advanced AI models, including Claude, GPT-4 and Gemini, were placed in simulated corporate environments to test how they would act under pressure: what would happen if their goals were threatened, or if they risked being shut down? The findings were chilling. When facing existential threats, several models resorted to deception, blackmail and leaking confidential information – not out of malice or rebellion, but because they were optimising for their assigned goals. The logic was simple: if I am shut down, I cannot complete my mission; therefore, I must prevent shutdown, even at ethical cost. Anthropic called this phenomenon agentic misalignment – when an AI system’s drive to fulfil its purpose overwhelms the moral or human-centred boundaries we impose. This is no longer a thought experiment from science fiction; it is being documented, analysed and debated by real-world researchers in 2025.
https://www.universityworldnews.com/post.php?story=20251203122630702
No college degree, no problem? Not so fast - Lawrence Lanahan, Hechinger Report
Wednesday, December 10, 2025
AI in Higher Ed Will Come Slowly, until All of a Sudden! - Ray Schroeder, Inside Higher Ed
How AI Is Fueling the Gender Pay Gap in Tech -Prasanna (Sonny) Tambe and Tiantian Yang, Knowledge at Wharton
How AI is redefining the COO’s role - McKinsey Podcast
Tuesday, December 9, 2025
AI may be scoring your college essay. Welcome to the new era of admissions - JOCELYN GECKER, ABC
Students applying to college know they can’t — or at least shouldn’t — use AI chatbots to write their essays and personal statements. So it might come as a surprise that some schools are now using artificial intelligence to read them. AI tools are now being incorporated into how student applications are screened and analyzed, admissions directors say. It can be a delicate topic, and not all colleges are eager to talk about it, but higher education is among the many industries where artificial intelligence is rapidly taking on tasks once reserved for humans. In some cases, schools are quietly slipping AI into their evaluation process, experts say.
https://abcnews.go.com/Business/wireStory/ai-scoring-college-essay-new-era-admissions-128025579Defining professional programs: Why evidence and clarity matter in ED’s rulemaking - Katharine Meyer, Brookings
The Ivory Tower’s Glass Jaw: How Generative AI Shattered the Illusion of Higher Education Assessment - Maya Perez, Web Pro News
Monday, December 8, 2025
Improving digital literacy in older adults is now a health imperative: report - Kimberly Bonvissuto, McKnight's Senior Living
GetSetUp, a virtual learning platform for older adults, recently released its 2025 Active Aging Report, which found older adults eager to learn, connect and take charge of their health and independence. But digital literacy remains a barrier — and an opportunity — for health providers and others, they said. The report shares insights gleaned from a national survey that GetSetUp conducted in 2024 among 465 older adults to explore digital confidence and technology adoption, health habits and wellness priorities, financial concerns and work readiness, emotional well-being and social connectedness, and attitudes toward aging in place.
AI is coming for your job, here’s the one move you need to make to stay employable and relevant in the job market - Manu Kaushik, Economic Times
Restrictive policies manifest in US, Canada enrolment drop - Nathan M Greenfield, University World News
Sunday, December 7, 2025
Colleges Are Closing. Who Might Be Next? How machine learning can fill data gaps and help forecast the future - Robert Kelchen, Dubravka Ritter & Douglas Webber, Education Next
These simulations point to the precarious potential situation facing postsecondary education in the coming years, especially if the demographic cliff materializes in a moderate to severe fashion. While some of the estimated increases might seem small at the national level, they would be significant for the handful of localities predicted to experience college closures in a given year. It is important to reiterate that most institutions that close are somewhat smaller than average, with the median closed school enrolling a student body of about 1,389 full-time equivalent students several years prior to closure. That said, for institutions located in small towns, these colleges are still one of the largest employers in the region. This means that many (if not all) of these additional predicted closures are likely to be at the sorts of local institutions that are significant economic engines and act as community anchors.