A top US pioneer in not-for-profit online education is stepping down from his leadership post after creating one of the nation鈥檚 biggest universities, and turning his attention to what he called an urgent need to integrate artificial intelligence into the post-secondary sector.
Paul LeBlanc, the president of Southern New Hampshire University since 2003, said he was moving ahead with disappointment and concern that US higher education has not taken much more seriously the need to quickly address the potential and the implications of AI for institutions and their students.
鈥淭his is massively important,鈥 Dr LeBlanc told聽糖心Vlog, describing an initial wave of AI that has helped some faculty update their courses much faster than ever before, but then leaves them struggling to reliably assess student performance. 鈥淥vernight, AI has made almost all curricula out of date.鈥
In preparation for聽聽from the presidency this summer, Dr LeBlanc said he has begun assembling a small AI study team at SNHU headlined by online education innovator George Siemens, who also views US universities as having almost completely ceded to the private sector the development and use of AI in education.
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Professor Siemens, a professor at the University of Texas at Arlington and the University of South Australia, talked of academic leadership being asleep at the wheel, and now needing to act on the scale of a few years or less. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no foregone conclusion鈥 about how AI will shape universities, he said, 鈥渂ut there are people with conclusions selling services to us 鈥 and the fact that we鈥檙e not in that arena, that鈥檚 the part that alarms me most.鈥
Dr LeBlanc has gained renown for building SNHU from a small regional institution of a few thousand students into a global behemoth with more than 225,000 online customers. Professor Siemens, meanwhile, co-created and taught the first Mooc 鈥 massive open online course 鈥 back in 2008, well before ventures such as edX and Coursera made the concept familiar.
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Professor Siemens remains a national leader in technology-infused teaching, and he agreed to join Dr LeBlanc at SNHU to take a 鈥渃lean-sheet approach鈥 to AI 鈥 redesigning higher education without any restraints聽because of current norms.
Both offer standard caveats about having no ability to predict where the pursuit will take them. 鈥淲e鈥檙e early in the work,鈥 Dr LeBlanc said. 鈥淎nd anyone who pretends to have clarity about what that is, I would distrust, including myself.鈥
Campus resource collection: AI transformers like ChatGPT are here, so what next?
Professor Siemens said he also could not be sure of the basic direction, including whether AI will cement higher education鈥檚 drift into an increasingly聽job-centric and mercenary聽mindset, or create unimagined new freedom for faculty and students to ignore tedious distractions and prioritise human and societal development.
鈥淏ut I do know that trying to answer it,鈥 Professor Siemens said, 鈥渋s a hell of a lot better than absorbing the answer that Big Tech offers me.鈥 Across US higher education, he said, 鈥淭here hasn鈥檛 been a significant leadership response that meets the needs of the moment.鈥
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Dr LeBlanc鈥檚 experience with SNHU can be taken as foreshadowing either direction. On the one hand, he built a聽student-first ethos聽while much of online higher education became known for for-profit exploitation. He talked of a governing board that readily agreed to shift millions of dollars during the pandemic to boost SNHU鈥檚 already high adviser-student ratio when it became clear that completion rates were dropping, and spent another $1 million (拢800,000) helping family members of its Afghan students escape the Taliban takeover. He points with pride to keeping SNHU鈥檚 undergraduate tuition fees below $10,000, and to student satisfaction rates of 95 per cent.
At the same time, SNHU is designed to help large numbers of students get the essential training they need, at the lowest possible cost, to land them a foothold in a workforce of rising income inequality. Its most popular major, by far, is business administration and management.
As for practical applications of AI, SNHU is already finding some. A chief area, Dr LeBlanc said, was curriculum design. Creating a new course previously took many weeks, and the use of AI has cut that time by more than a quarter.
And while many across US higher education fear that AI-generated text has destroyed the reliability of higher education鈥檚 traditionally fundamental assessment tool 鈥 student essays 鈥 Dr LeBlanc is pushing SNHU faculty to seize the opportunity. Rather than joining other institutions in trying to detect ChatGPT鈥檚 use and ban it, he actively encourages聽lecturers and students to use such tools in their writing classes. But, he said, the students are asked to show the prompts they gave ChatGPT to generate their essay, then show how they improved it, and how they determined what information in it was accurate.
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鈥淧rohibiting a tool, that will actually be the tool they鈥檙e expected to use, seems nonsensical to me,鈥 he said.
Ideally, if AI takes over jobs that are routine and repetitive, Dr LeBlanc said, that could add value in education and in the job market to professions that are most human-centred, such as teachers, social workers, counsellors and coaches. 鈥淲e鈥檝e never needed it more,鈥 he said.
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Universities are just 鈥榓bsorbing the answers that Big Tech offers鈥
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