Thursday, June 26, 2025

 Artificial Intelligence in Higher Education

Artificial intelligence (AI) tools have emerged as some of the most positively disruptive and contested technologies in higher education. The rapid advancement of digital connectivity has fueled exponential growth in AI adoption, development, integration, and accessibility, transforming how academic institutions teach, assess, and navigate the educational environment. Consider, for example, the stark contrast in user adoption between Instagram and ChatGPT. Instagram, launched in 2010, took over two years to reach 100 million users, while ChatGPT—introduced in 2022—achieved the same milestone of attracting 100 million users in less than three months (Meeker, 2024). This drastic comparison underscores society’s broad receptiveness to AI while simultaneously highlighting how exponential increases in interconnectivity have accelerated the momentum of emerging technologies.

For higher education, these fast-paced trends place a dual responsibility on institutions and educators to equip students with knowledge of emerging technologies, such as AI, and to integrate these tools into instructional environments thoughtfully. Doing so can enhance learning experiences and help move beyond the limitations of a one-size-fits-all educational model (Robert et al., 2025). The Los Angeles Pacific University is among the forward-leaning institutions actively integrating AI assistants into academic environments to enhance student experiences. The university strategically incorporated an AI assistant into active learning strategies (e.g., Think-Pair-Share), with preliminary findings suggesting improvements in student engagement and comprehension (Los Angeles Pacific University, 2024). While these early results are promising, skeptics caution that the growing integration of AI in education and broader society—often referred to as human-AI symbiosis—may undermine human autonomy and creativity (Robert et al., 2025). In response to these concerns, it becomes increasingly important to design AI implementations in ways that preserve human independence and originality.

Forces of Technology and Ethics in Educational AI

The integration of AI in higher education is influenced by the forces of technology and ethics that simultaneously enable and constrain innovation. In the context of this post, the influential force of technology originates from improvements in advanced computing (e.g., machine learning) that have made AI more accessible, scalable, and applicable to diverse audiences and applications. These developments are prompting educational institutions to reconsider traditional approaches by incorporating AI to provide new opportunities for personalized instruction, real-time feedback, and adaptive learning experiences. However, the pace of these innovations presents ethical challenges that institutions cannot ignore. Provided that a university does not develop these AI systems or has the staff to understand the complexity of an open-source codebase, there are growing concerns with data privacy, algorithmic bias, training discrepancies, and, most importantly, the potential to erode student creativity, which highlights a need for model scrutiny. As noted by Robert et al. (2025), there is a growing concern about the balance between the promise of AI’s ability to enhance education and the risk of overreliance on these systems, which could deskill educators and reduce students to mere data points. This relationship highlights the vital importance of ethical stewardship in technology implementations, ensuring that the convergence of AI and education does not compromise ethical boundaries at the expense of academic integrity.

A Technology Trend in Student Transcripts

From high school diplomas to college degrees, academic institutions are exploring new and innovative ways to supplement traditional student transcripts, which often lack comprehensive information. Traditional student transcripts often fail to recognize students’ achievements outside of a somewhat ambiguous course name and grading criterion (e.g., A+) (Gagnon, 2023). For instance, a cybersecurity curriculum could include topics such as communication, collaboration, leadership, and critical thinking; however, this information does not get reported on traditional transcripts. Seeding this topic in a real-world example, in 2022, the author of this post was a recent college graduate in cybersecurity, eager to contribute to the skilled workforce. What happened next was unexpected—rather than being welcomed for holding a relevant cybersecurity degree (i.e., cyber forensics and vulnerability management), he quickly realized most employers were prioritizing “experience” over education. This disconnect became more apparent when he discovered that transcripts listing courses like “vulnerability management” failed to acknowledge the hands-on offensive security labs, reverse engineering exercises, collaborative projects, and teamwork skills developed throughout the course. Despite submitting over 65 job applications, he eventually secured a promising position as a vulnerability analyst that would jumpstart his career in cybersecurity. This experience, echoed by other students, highlights a critical issue in the education and employment pipeline: traditional transcripts often fail to convey the full breadth of a student’s skills and readiness. Collectively, this highlights the growing need for next-generation credentials that more accurately represent applied competencies and real-world capabilities.

Next-generation credentials, as described by Coffey (2024), are akin to a digital wallet that stores learning and employment credentials in a centralized space—much like an application. These digital representations of skill sets would broaden the depth and breadth of capturing student capabilities, including, but not limited to, academic engagements, research, technical certifications, leadership roles, extracurricular activities, community service, and much more. This approach would help bridge the divide between education and industry, enabling students to continue growing their digital portfolios as they progress through their professional careers. While this approach appears promising, it presents novel challenges to the implementation of next-generation credentials. For instance, this shift in focus would necessitate a storage medium for digital credentials, a training program for educators to learn about this new requirement, and effective cybersecurity solutions to ensure that digital credentials are authentic and not manipulated by the owner or a threat actor (Robert et al., 2025). In addition to these concerns, they should not be overburdensome for the staff or students, as this could deter them from using it and inadvertently cause the same issue as before. To succeed, academic institutions will need to gather input from educators and students to develop an intuitive user interface while also creating policies and training programs that prioritize usability and security.

Note. From Blockchain, self-sovereign identity and digital credentials: Promise versus praxis in education, by Grech et al., 2021 (doi: 10.3389/fbloc.2021.616779)

National and Technological Forces in Next-Generation Credentials

The transition to next-generation credentials is being driven by a convergence of national and technological forces that challenge the status quo of academic credentialing. Nationally, the growing skills gap between graduates and industry demands has sparked concern from students and educators. As workforce expectations shift toward demonstrable, real-world experiences—particularly in evolving fields like cybersecurity—traditional transcripts are increasingly seen as insufficient methods of communicating a student’s skill sets. This disconnect not only hinders new graduates from entering the workforce but also signals a broader issue with how academic achievements are communicated at a national level to fulfill critical positions. Advancements in digital infrastructure, blockchain authentication, and cloud-based storage, combined with technology, are enabling more dynamic, secure, and portable credentialing systems (Robert et al., 2025). These innovations make it possible and feasible to create lifelong, verifiable records of a student’s learning experiences, encapsulating their academic rigor. However, these same technologies introduce new challenges, such as data privacy, cybersecurity risks, system interoperability, and training requirements. As the nation works to modernize its education framework through innovative methods, a collaboration between academia, government, and industry will be essential to ensure that next-generation credentials are scalable, secure, and relatable, thereby facilitating the reformation of the new workforce.

References

Coffey, L. (2024, April 05). Digital wallets explored as next generation transcripts. Retrieved June 26, 2025, from www.insidehighered.com: https://www.insidehighered.com/news/tech-innovation/alternative-credentials/2024/04/05/digital-wallets-next-generation-college

Gagnon, L. (2023, September 12). Colleges are ditching the sat. the high school transcript should be next. Retrieved June 26, 2025, from www.highereddive.com: https://www.highereddive.com/news/next-gen-credentials-high-school-transcripts/692823/

Grech, A., Sood, I., & Arino, L. (2021, March 29). Blockchain, self-sovereign identity and digital credentials: Promise versus praxis in education. doi:10.3389/fbloc.2021.616779

Los Angeles Pacific University. (2024). People centered technology driven. Retrieved June 25, 2025, from www.aicenter.lapu.edu: https://aicenter.lapu.edu/horizon-report#people-centered-technology-driven

Meeker, M. (2024, July 01). AI and universities - will masters of learning master new learnings? Retrieved June 25, 2025, from www.bondcap.com: https://www.bondcap.com/reports/aiu

Robert, J., Muscanell, N., McCormack, M., Pelletier, K., Arnold, K., Arbino, N., . . . Reeves, J. (2025). 2025 educause horizon report: Teaching and learning edition. Retrieved June 25, 2025, from www.library.educause.edu: https://library.educause.edu/-/media/files/library/2025/5/2025hrteachinglearning.pdf

 

 

Sunday, June 22, 2025

 



From the Frontlines to the Future: A Personal Mission

    After serving a combined 13 years in the United States Marine Corps Infantry and Marine Corps Special Operations Command (MARSOC), I have developed the ability to think critically and act decisively under pressure and in complex environments. While still in uniform, I developed a strong interest in cybersecurity, particularly while attending advanced technical courses that supported operational readiness. That interest drew attention to a different technological battlefield, where it evolved into a passion and ultimately led me to earn degrees in cyber forensics and vulnerability management at Norwich University. To this day, I continue to pursue my educational goals and aspirations through Colorado Technical University’s Doctor of Computer Science program.

    My follow-on mission after military service would look toward the future and the often-challenging transition from uniformed service to the public sector. Seeking a meaningful way to continue serving the United States national security interests beyond the physical battlefield, my wife and I made the difficult decision to relocate from the mountains of Colorado to a rural town in eastern Virginia to begin a new chapter with the Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS). This move represented more than just a geographic change; it marked a deliberate and strategic shift into the world of technical policy, export controls, and safeguarding America’s technological edge.

The Topics of Futuring and Innovation

    This blog is a unique and exclusive space that will complement the academic work produced throughout my doctoral course in Futuring and Innovation. It provides a venue for in-depth and comprehensive reflections on the strategic intersections of emerging and future technologies, as well as policy, planning, and innovation, within the context of complex sociotechnical systems. By exploring these bleeding-edge topics, this blog aims to maintain situational awareness within the innovative landscape by staying informed on emerging topics, up-to-date on current research, and thereby transcending beyond traditional classroom boundaries.

    In this space, we will examine forward-looking and emergent themes, drawing heavily on structured foresight tools, such as scenario planning and horizon scanning, to help future professionals anticipate and prepare for fluid environments. As Tidd and Bessant (2024) suggest, these tools are essential for shaping outcomes to produce the most significant potential impact. In addition to these tools, the blog will examine the role of think tanks in fostering and shaping innovation alongside forecasting frameworks (e.g., the key phases of innovation) used to analyze trends, research, and geopolitical settings. Central to this focus will be collaboration and aligning “disruptive technologies,” conceptual ideas, and theoretical underpinnings with innovation goals, emphasizing how this futuring and innovation approach is vital for forward progression. Lastly, the blog will acknowledge the importance of sociotechnical planning and its impact in creating effective and lasting solutions that necessitate the seamless integration of society, culture, and technology.

Why it Matters

    The future is shaped by those who design it. As someone who operated on the frontlines of conflict and now navigates the geopolitical corridors of cyber resiliency, bridging experience, foresight, and passion is essential. It is the thinkers, the doers, and the dreamers who understand the dimensions of innovation and the necessity of forward progression. This blog will likely serve as a reflection and projection of archives of ideas, lessons, and ongoing questions about where we are and where we are going to build a safer, brighter, and more resilient future across all spectrums. Whether individuals are technologists, tinkerers, critical thinkers, or simply curious about the future, this blog will foster a conversation that produces creative and innovative ideas by leveraging collective experiences.

 -Matthew Miller


References

Rehmani, A. (2023, November 09). Embracing the future: Technology and innovation in the 21st century. Retrieved June 22, 2025, from www.medium.com: https://medium.com/@aa6130753/embracing-the-future-technology-and-innovation-in-the-21st-century-d1c796e4de55

Tidd, J., & Bessant, J. R. (2024). Managing innovation: Integrating technology, market and organizational change (8 ed.). John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Retrieved June 18, 2025, from https://coloradotech.vitalsource.com/reader/books/9781394252053/epubcfi/6/10[%3Bvnd.vst.idref%3DAf03]!/4/2

 

 

  Artificial Intelligence in Higher Education Artificial intelligence (AI) tools have emerged as some of the most positively disruptive an...