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.
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
For Whom the Bell (Curve) Tolls? Classes That Yield Too Many A’s! - Ray Schroeder, Inside Higher Ed
AI research papers are getting better, and it’s a big problem for scientists - Joshua Dzieza, the Verge
Institutions Prepare for New Accreditation Regulations = Jessica Blake, Inside Higher Ed
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
First UK universities to offer LLE short courses announced - Tom Williams, Times Higher Education
We now have clashing views on the value of college - Matt Zalaznick, University Business
The AI assembly line: Strategic imperatives for CEOs - Gianmarco Cilento, Steffen Fuchs , and Varun Marya; McKinsey
Just as Ford’s production line transformed physical labor, agentic AI—systems that can act autonomously rather than just responding to prompts—is now reshaping cognitive work, including engineering design, supply chain planning, and risk assessment. (We will refer to agentic AI simply as “AI” throughout this article.) With AI, companies no longer need to depend solely on the judgment and availability of a small number of experts to make complex decisions or create sophisticated products. Instead, knowledge becomes broadly accessible to anyone with the right AI capabilities, accelerating decision-making, product customization, and other tasks once limited to experts.
Monday, May 25, 2026
Landscape of Emerging Technologies in Higher Education: A Review - Sharin Jacob, Heather Miceli and Hannah Schneider, Digital Promise
Students prefer personalized, AI-generated educational videos over non-personalized, human-recorded videos - Bill Tomlinson, etc all; Nature
The Third Wave of Online Education: Why AI-Powered Adaptive Learning Could Disrupt Universities, Corporate Training, and Workforce Development - Tim King, Solutions Review
Friday, May 22, 2026
The fierce battle over AI in schools The AI arms race has hit the classroom. - Chase DiBenedetto, Mashable
The AI industry is still in flux, and university programs are trying to keep up - Marketplace
Student AI use is fuelling grade inflation – Berkeley study - Nathan M Greenfield, University World News
Thursday, May 21, 2026
5 Things to Know About the Changing Cybersecurity Landscape in Higher Education - UMass Amherst
Assessing students when artificial intelligence is ubiquitous - Michelle Seref, Times Higher Education
AI and the Employment Outlook for College Grads - Jim A. Jorstad, GovTech
Wednesday, May 20, 2026
The Case for Data Centers in Space- McKinsey
Starcloud CEO Philip Johnston on the potential role orbital data centers could play in meeting growing AI compute demand—and the technical and economic uncertainties that remain. Philip Johnston, a McKinsey alumnus and cofounder of orbital compute infrastructure provider Starcloud, believes that space-based systems could become a meaningful part of the future compute landscape. He recently spoke to McKinsey Partner Luca Bennici about how the space-based data center technology is evolving, the challenges involved, and what needs to happen for orbital data centers to become a viable complement to terrestrial infrastructure. The interview transcript has been edited for clarity and style.
‘Student Guide to AI’ returns for third year with a new focus: Human capabilities - Elon University News Bureau
AI risk to university jobs despite staff believing roles are safe - Juliette Rowsell, Times Higher Ed
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.