糖心Vlog

Machine learning: universities ready students for AI revolution

Sydney鈥檚 move towards programmes focused on problem-solving designed to address rise of artificial intelligence and automation

Published on
August 3, 2017
Last updated
August 3, 2017
Giant robot legs
Source: Getty
Robot masters: graduates need the problem-solving skills to cope with the rise of artificial intelligence and automation

A vice-chancellor鈥檚 call for universities to train undergraduates 鈥渢o tell the machines what to do鈥 has rekindled debate about how higher education institutions can best prepare their students for the jobs of the future.

Michael Spence outlined plans for the University of Sydney to move towards offering four-year degrees with a greater focus on problem-solving and cultural competency as sector leaders around the world debate whether the rise of artificial intelligence and automation will require providers to prioritise specialist skills in areas such as coding, or broad knowledge that will allow graduates to adapt to a changing workplace.

The shift towards longer degrees also runs counter to the push in the UK for more two-year degrees, designed to allow students to start their career more quickly and more cheaply.

In an interview with 糖心Vlog, Dr Spence outlined how Sydney had streamlined its 122 degree programmes 鈥 a portfolio based on the supposition that 鈥渋f you enter a narrow tube that has a job name at one end, at the other end you鈥檒l plop out into the job鈥 鈥 to just 25.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

The rise of AI means that such jobs 鈥渕ay not exist by the time you end up there, or at least won鈥檛 necessarily have any longevity鈥, Dr Spence said.

Next year, Sydney will introduce a four-year bachelor of advanced studies degree, combining specialism in a discipline with the option of taking a second 鈥渕ajor鈥, foreign language training, international mobility, and cultural competency training.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

The signature element of the programme is an extended problem-solving project, where multidisciplinary teams of students work together to tackle a real-life challenge set by a business or charity.

鈥淭he skills that machines won鈥檛 have particularly well 鈥 creativity, interpersonal skills, the ability to think laterally 鈥 [these are] the kinds of skills that you need to tell the machines what to do, [and] university education is going to need to be shifted more in that direction,鈥 Dr Spence said.

Dr Spence, formerly the head of the social sciences division at the University of Oxford, admitted that Sydney had been 鈥渧ery nervous鈥 about the change, since degrees would map less closely onto potential jobs. There was an expectation that many parents, particularly in overseas markets, would prefer students to take a degree in what Professor Spence described as 鈥渢able and chair science鈥 with a view to 鈥済oing into the table and chair industry鈥.

But the response has been positive, he said, adding: 鈥淧eople get that you need a different kind of education for a much more uncertain world of work.鈥

This is just one of the approaches being taken by universities to prepare students for jobs that don鈥檛 exist yet. Other institutions, such as the universities of Edinburgh and Adelaide, and University College London, have focused on developing similar sorts of skills to those that Sydney is cultivating by getting students involved in conducting research.

Leaders of Asian universities in particular, and some US institutions, have suggested that institutions may need to prioritise software and data skills in response to the so-called 鈥渇ourth industrial revolution鈥.

But Asia and parts of Europe have also seen a revival of liberal arts degrees, focused on equipping students with broad knowledge across a range of disciplines.

Mike Sharples, chair in educational technology at the Open University, said that developing graduate attributes such as critical thinking, creativity, global awareness and networking skills were key tasks for higher education institutions.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

He argued that graduates would need to know how to work with AI systems, meaning that they would need some 鈥渜uite specific skills鈥 to help them understand how AI systems operate.

鈥淭his [the combination of these approaches] is something that universities really have got to get to grips with,鈥 Professor Sharples said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 done in pieces in some universities, whether through career planning or through introductory courses, but I don鈥檛 think that any university does it in a really systematic way.鈥

Sector leaders predict that universities may also need to develop much more meaningful lifelong relationships with their students: providing an initial higher education experience, and retraining at regular intervals during a graduate鈥檚 career as the jobs market evolves.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Simon Marginson, professor of international higher education at UCL, said that he 鈥渨orries to see the same old debate between liberal immersion in knowledge 鈥 as generic training in self-developing thinking and creativity 鈥 versus curricula attuned to industry specifics鈥.

鈥淥bviously both are needed, if we want self-determining people who understand the context and the processes, and can both lead and work to a set agenda,鈥 he said.

chris.havergal@timeshighereducation.com


Growth predicted for 鈥榖ig-picture hybrid鈥 degrees in 鈥榮maller鈥 sector

Universities are likely to get smaller and focus more on 鈥渂ig-picture hybrid鈥 degrees in response to the impact of artificial intelligence and automation, a researcher has claimed.

Peter Murphy, adjunct professor in the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at La Trobe University, and the author of , told 糖心Vlog that 鈥渢he era of the mass university is over鈥 and that universities 鈥渨ill have to return to their traditional mission of educating exceptional talent鈥.

Higher education expansion had been driven since the 1970s by the demand for white collar workers across the Western world, according to Professor Murphy, who said that many of these jobs were 鈥渘ow disappearing鈥.

鈥淯niversities won't disappear, but they will shrink in size,鈥 he predicted. 鈥淪ome will go out of business entirely; vice-chancellors are in self-denial about this. They are resisting the number one imperative of the age: get smaller.

鈥淢any more young people in the future will go from secondary school straight into the workforce. For one-third to half of students today, the return on their investment in a university education is poor.

鈥淭ertiary-level self-learning is increasing; competency-based qualifications are growing, they already dominate in IT. In place of a taught course, you simply sit an exam to determine what you know.鈥

In this environment, some 鈥渙ld demanding disciplines鈥, such as engineering and political science, will continue to do well, Professor Murphy said, because 鈥渢heir graduates can鈥檛 be replaced by an algorithm鈥.

But the 鈥渂ig losers鈥 would be 鈥渟tudies-style鈥 courses such as media, business and environmental studies, Professor Murphy said, with jobs linked to these courses gradually being automated.

鈥淥n the upside, growth will occur in big-picture hybrid courses,鈥 Professor Murphy continued. 鈥淭hese meld technology, mathematics and social science. Amazon is the paradigm of the auto-industrial employer: it wants high-level graduates who can work across economics, technology and data science.

鈥淭his is not a mass job market. So universities will have to return to their traditional mission of educating exceptional talent.鈥

Professor Murphy added that while the workplace was becoming 鈥渕ore entrepreneurial鈥, universities 鈥渢hink only in terms of salaried work for graduates鈥 and were 鈥渧ery uncomfortable with graduates starting up small businesses鈥.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline:聽Machine learning: readying students for the AI revolution

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT