This post was originally published on this site.
Southern New Hampshire University President Paul J. LeBlanc said universities should use artificial intelligence in classrooms at a roundtable discussion hosted by the Harvard Graduate School of Education on Thursday.
LeBlanc, who now co-leads Matter and Space, an AI-powered education company, argued that academic institutions should equip their students with AI literacy skills.
âIâd encourage everyone to use AI as much as possible,â he said. âThese are the skills you need to master in order to be competitive in the job market.â
âIt makes no sense to me that you would ask students not to use the tools that will actually empower them and make them distinctive in the job search,â he added.
Southern New Hampshire University is the largest nonprofit online university in the United States. LeBlanc, who became president in 2003, spoke at the hybrid HGSE event on AI in higher education with Michael B. Horn, a HGSE adjunct lecturer.
âMaybe in the next few years, we will no longer be the most powerful entities on the planet when it comes to certain kinds of knowledge, knowledge making, knowledge processing,â LeBlanc said. âAnd if thatâs true, then the question becomes, what is the purpose of learning?â
LeBlanc argued that there is a large gap between college graduatesâ competency and the need for AI literacy in the job market.
âIn one survey, something like 60 or 65 percent of classmates and university graduates said that they felt the university had not prepared them for the use of AI for the world of work,â he said. âInterestingly â coincidentally â in the same week, some 70 percent of employers said they would not hire somebody that didnât possess skills.â
LeBlanc described the impact of AI on the job market as a âmassive displacementâ and âmassive restructuringâ of jobs. He compared the current struggle to adapt to AI as a âmessy transition periodâ before âa golden age.â
Advertisement
âWhen I think about AI, I think a lot about who isnât today served by our post secondary system, who canât afford it or for whatever other reasons,â LeBlanc said. âThe incumbent system doesnât work.â
Horn added that at HGSE, he tries to think âcynicallyâ about the schoolâs students and its âvalue proposition.â
âAnd then try to think about, âWhat are these other colleges and universities that serve very different populations in very different circumstances?ââ Horn said.
âHow can we use technology in radically different ways to help them make progress in their lives?â he added.
â Staff writer Tanya J. Vidhun can be reached at tanya.vidhun@thecrimson.com. Follow her on X @tanyavidhun.