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.
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
In an AI-driven world, the most important skills are still human - Eric Townsend, Inside Higher Ed
Gaining real-world experience through internships - Massey University News
Micro-credentials gain ground as focus shifts from degrees to skills - Enterprise AM
A university degree is no longer the only ticket to a career. Employers across the globe — and increasingly in Egypt — are placing more emphasis on practical skills and targeted expertise, fueling demand for short courses, professional certifications, and micro-credentials that offer faster and cheaper avenues into the labor market. Short courses, big gains: Micro-credentials — short, skills-focused programs granting a verified certificate or digital badge — are gaining ground in fast-changing sectors like tech, digital marketing, AI, cybersecurity, and data analytics. Programs span local training from the Information Technology Institute and the Digital Egypt Pioneers Initiative (DEPI) to global options like Google Career Certificates on Coursera and Udacity Nanodegrees, iCareer founder and CEO Akram Marwan tells EnterpriseAM. The shift reflects a broader rethink of education — less a one-time university experience, more a continuous process of reskilling. As technologies evolve faster than universities can adapt, workers and employers want cheaper, targeted ways to build job-ready skills, Marwan says. Lower-cost online programs and funded initiatives like DEPI are also widening access beyond Cairo and Alexandria, potentially expanding the pool for remote and digital jobs.
Monday, May 18, 2026
Artificial intelligence assisted design of a novel cooperative learning technique for higher education - Özgür Tutal, Nature
University of Chicago eyes further deficit cuts, staff raises - Max Blaisdell, Hyde Park Herald
University of Michigan’s $20M OpenAI bet aims for $2B return, legal report shows - Jackie Smith, MLive
Friday, May 15, 2026
UNESCO and Tec Launch Regional Observatory on the Benefits and Risks of AI in Education - Ricardo Treviño, TecScience
One New Thing: Campus Libraries Become AI Hubs - B. Navarre, US News
Chico State’s 2026-27 Book in Common to Tackle Artificial Intelligence - Chico State
The AI Con is a thought-provoking work examining the rise of artificial intelligence and its far-reaching impacts on society, education and the economy. The selection comes amid heightened interest and debate surrounding AI technologies, including within higher education. Co-authored by a University of Washington linguistics professor and a former Google employee, the book takes a critical look at artificial intelligence, exploring how it functions, the realities behind its rapid expansion, and the social, ethical and environmental implications of its use. Topics include the influence of AI on jobs and creative industries, concerns about academic integrity, and the environmental costs associated with large-scale data centers. “AI is now part of nearly every aspect of our lives,” Mahlis said. “This book helps readers understand not just what AI does, but how it works, and encourages us to question both the hype and the real consequences.”
https://today.csuchico.edu/chico-states-2026-27-book-in-common-to-tackle-artificial-intelligence/
Thursday, May 14, 2026
Jeff Rubin ’95 on AI, Digital Transformation, and Syracuse’s Connected Future - Syracuse University
From Restriction to Integration: Practical Strategies for Embracing AI in Online Courses - Taoufik Ennoure, Faculty Focus
Micro Credentials Reshaping Learning While Degrees Remain Relevant - Asia News Network
As global education systems evolve to meet rapidly changing workforce demands, micro credentials are gaining traction as a flexible complement to traditional degrees rather than a replacement, according to international policy bodies and education experts. Micro credentials, defined by the European Union as certifications of “learning outcomes of short-term learning experiences,” are designed to provide targeted, skills-based learning in a shorter timeframe. Meanwhile, UNESCO notes that micro credentials typically focus on “a specific set of learning outcomes in a narrow field” and are achieved over a shorter period compared to traditional qualifications such as degrees. The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development OECD further highlight their growing role in supporting lifelong learning and employability, particularly as individuals seek to upskill and reskill in response to labour market changes.
https://asianews.network/micro-credentials-reshaping-learning-while-degrees-remain-relevant/
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
Leadership Vision of the COLO to Shape Higher Ed Future? - Ray Schroeder, Inside Higher Ed
Instructure Pays Ransom to Canvas Hackers - Kathryn Palmer, Inside Higher Ed
UW System Will Give Raises to Faculty in High-Demand Fields - Inside Higher Ed
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
What’s Behind a Drop in New Adult Learners This Fall? - Inside Higher Ed
Why Women Need Other Women at Work - Angie Basiouny, Knowledge at Wharton
AI Agents in Education: What’s Working and What’s Missing - Abby Sourwine, GovTech
As universities pilot agentic AI for advising and administrative tasks, its place in teaching and learning remains unclear. Experts say decision-makers will need to look carefully at reliability, risks and partners. “We are in the earliest days,” said Nicole Engelbert, vice president of product strategy for student systems at Oracle. “Take a side eye on what anyone is saying about what’s happening in a pervasive way.” “Education is specifically different than your normal institutional tasks,” said Jake Burley, a researcher at the Applied Ethics Center at the University of Massachusetts, Boston. “There’s a strong sense that there’s something personal or powerful about the educational experience.”
https://www.govtech.com/education/higher-ed/ai-agents-in-education-whats-working-and-whats-missing
Monday, May 11, 2026
10 Top Websites Offering Free Online Courses - Academia Mag
Courageous conversations: How to lead with heart - McKinsey
UPDATE: Canvas restored at U of I, final exams rescheduled - Ethan Holesha, Molly Sweeney, Bradley Zimmerman, WCIA
Canvas has been restored at the University of Illinois and the final exams that have already been affected by it are being rescheduled. In a Massmail to students and staff on Saturday at 11:51 a.m., U of I provost John Coleman said Canvas at the university is now online and available to the community. As a result, final ecams originally scheduled for Friday, May 8, will take place on Sunday, May 10. All exam times and locations will remain unchanged from their originally scheduled time. PREVIOUSLY: U of I finals postponed, students confused after Canvas cybersecurity breach Coleman also said as always, instructors will still have the discretion to make the changes they find appropriate to meet course objectives. He noted that deans have asked all instructors to be mindful of the needs of students with an approved accommodation through DRES.