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, July 8, 2026
‘RAISE US’ Is a Rare Positive Development in AI Transformation - Ray Schroeder, Inside Higher Ed
The Apprenticeship Wish List - Johanna Alonso, Inside Higher Ed
Teaching, AI, and the Human Core of Education : The Future Worth Defending - Armand Doucet
Tuesday, July 7, 2026
Judge Tosses ED’s ‘Professional’ Degree Definition, Likely Aiding Student Borrowers - Ryan Quinn, Inside Higher Ed
The symbiotic enterprise - McKinsey
Amazon is joining RAISE US as a founding member to help workers prepare for the jobs of tomorrow. - Amazon
Amazon is partnering with RAISE US to help American workers develop skills for AI-era jobs. RAISE US brings together companies, policymakers, and educators to address the workforce impacts of AI. The coalition will further extend Amazon's reach to support communities and workers with the skills they need. Today Amazon is announcing that we’ve joined RAISE US as a founding member to develop the workforce of the future for our employees and communities. RAISE US is a new bipartisan coalition that brings together companies, policymakers, and leaders to accelerate the transition to the jobs of the future. AI is transforming how we live and work at a pace few of us could have predicted. At Amazon, we see this every day—in the AI-powered tools that help our customers, the systems that optimize our logistics network, and the generative AI services we offer through AWS.
https://www.aboutamazon.com/news/policy-new-views/amazon-joins-raise-us-ai-workforce
Monday, July 6, 2026
Americans and AI 2026: Chatbots, Smart Devices and Views on Impact - Jeffery Gottlieb, et al; Pew Research
Universities must help shut down the illicit AI detection economy - Benjamin Luke Moorhouse and James Mian Jia, Times Higher Education
Would You Trust AI for Ethical Advice? - Knowledge at Wharton
Friday, July 3, 2026
New Study In Texas May Have Shown How To Better Measure College ROI - Michael B. Horn, Forbes
Advertising, training fairs, free tuition: How one state is trying to get more men into college - Rachel Fradette, Hechinger Report
California gave every student in prison a laptop. How community colleges are using them - Ella Carter-Klauschie, Cal Matters
California prisons have given 30,000 laptops to incarcerated students. Inmates say using technology prepares them to enter the workforce. As community colleges start replacing correspondence courses by mail with online-only classes, students and professors debate whether this type of learning is any more effective. In the past three years, the prison system spent $23.2 million to distribute 30,000 laptops to all incarcerated students. Almost half of those went to the 13,000 inmates enrolled in community college, who are increasingly doing their coursework online. The growth of online learning marks a shift away from correspondence courses, where inmates receive assignments in physical packets, fill them out, and mail them back to colleges, with limited feedback. While some community colleges still offer those types of courses, the laptops are starting to replace the packets.
Thursday, July 2, 2026
The emerging transcript built for skills, not courses - Elcino Donadel, University Business
Panelists say state, colleges must meet workforce needs as AI use grows - Matthew McFarland, News Tribune
Personalized talent cultivation and academic prediction framework for higher education based on the HA-GNN-LSTM architecture - Qi Gong & Jing Shi, Nature
To address the dilemma of homogeneous talent training and the efficiency bottleneck of human resource management in universities, this study proposes an innovative personalized training framework integrating artificial intelligence, big data, and deep learning. Based on the 18-dimensional full-cycle behavior dataset of 5,000 students and OULAD dataset, a multimodal heterogeneous data fusion pipeline is constructed. The simulation results demonstrate that, under established constraints and historical sample distributions, advisor allocation response time could be reduced by 60% and resource idle rate could be decreased by 63.4%. These findings indicate the framework’s potential for optimizing educational resource allocation. However, its managerial benefits require further validation through subsequent real-world deployment and long-term follow-up studies.
Wednesday, July 1, 2026
Reform education to conform to Artificial Intelligence - Technical universities urged - Alberto Mario Noretti, Graphic Online
Will ChatGPT Kill the Self-Help Book Market - Emma Jacobs, Financial Review
Pippa Wright, publishing director at Penguin Life, has a word of caution: non-fiction “has always been boom and bust. At the point it goes up, everyone says, ‘No one is interested in fiction, they want answers.’ And then romantasy goes up and everyone wants escapism.” According to NielsenIQ BookData for the UK, although sales have declined from their 2022 peak, they remain significantly higher than in 2015. Wright thinks one kind of self-help has “probably gone”: the “prescriptive book with five bullet points, with information that is summarised very easily... If it can be summarised in a paragraph, then why buy the book?”
https://www.afr.com/technology/will-chatgpt-kill-the-self-help-book-market-20260621-p608ow
Studying the Use of Generative Artificial Intelligence in Undergraduate Research at the U.S. Military AcademyPeer-Review - John Scudder1, et al; Journal of Military Learning
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
How Artificial Intelligence Is Changing Healthcare, Manufacturing, Recycling and Education - Tech Business News
Artificial intelligence (AI) is no longer a future-facing technology sitting inside research labs. It is now being used in doctor’s offices, classrooms, factories, recycling plants, semiconductor research facilities and government departments. The real shift is not just that AI can generate text, images or code. The bigger change is that AI systems are now being connected to daily decision-making, physical infrastructure and professional workflows. That makes the technology more useful, but also more difficult to manage. Across industries, AI is being used to detect disease, support teachers, predict machine failures, sort waste, discover new semiconductor materials, analyse risk, automate service desks and assist with policy planning. At the same time, it is raising hard questions about bias, privacy, security, accountability and whether people can understand how an AI system reached its answer.
Re-educating graduates for the competitive job market - Amber Wang, University World News
Can microcredentials drive new demand for higher ed? - Alcino Donadel, University Business
Higher education leaders, employers and students agree that microcredentials are critical for strengthening enrollment, improving workforce readiness and modernizing curriculum amid rapid AI-driven change. A new Coursera survey of more than 3,500 respondents worldwide found broad support for embedding industry-recognized credentials into degree pathways as institutions face mounting pressure to improve career outcomes and adapt curricula more quickly. In many cases, U.S. respondents expressed greater confidence in microcredentials than their global peers in India, the United Kingdom and other countries.