 Your new post is loading...
 Your new post is loading...
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
February 11, 5:29 PM
|
Looking for a Textbook on Generative AI in Education?
Teaching and Learning in the Age of Generative AI: Evidence-Based Approaches to Pedagogy, Ethics, and Beyond Edited by Joseph Rene Corbeil & Maria Elena Corbeil (2025) 🏆 Winner of the 2025 Systems Thinking & Change Division Outstanding Book Award from the Association for Educational Communications and Technology! If you are designing a course that addresses generative AI in education, this award-winning volume provides a research-driven, classroom-ready foundation. Rather than offering hype or fear, this book helps educators:
- Ground AI integration in learning theory and research
- Address academic integrity with thoughtful, practical strategies
- Redesign assessment for an AI-enabled world
- Explore ethics, bias, privacy, and institutional responsibility
- Leverage AI to enhance critical thinking and digital literacy
Bookended by historical and forward-looking analyses of AI in education, the chapters move beyond surface-level discussions to provide evidence-based approaches for real classrooms—K–12, higher education, and professional learning environments.
This text is ideal for:
- Undergraduate and graduate teacher education programs
- Curriculum & Instruction courses
- Educational Technology programs
- Higher education faculty development
- School technology coordinators and talent development professionals
Adopting a GenAI textbook for an upcoming semester? We invite you to request an inspection copy and explore how this resource can support your students in navigating AI with skill, ethics, and informed judgment.
Request your inspection copy today.
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 26, 11:52 AM
|
A study of more than 70 AI models, such as ChatGPT, shows that answers are similar even when prompted to be creative or brainstorm.
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 26, 11:44 AM
|
The goal of AI in higher education should be clear: Use technology to reinforce the learning moment, not replace it.
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 26, 11:37 AM
|
Two years into his English literature degree at the University of Pittsburgh, sophomore Luke Johnson has noticed something in his liberal arts courses: Students in his classes have gone quiet.
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 26, 11:30 AM
|
"Design practice is changing again. The process is shrinking, and most tasks, especially the ones usually reserved for junior designers, are being automated. Speed is even more important than before, and the go-to-market timeline is reducing consistently with the advancement in AI technologies."
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 25, 11:52 AM
|
I asked experts if I'm real. Bad news. Even my aunt wasn't sure if I was a deepfake. AI is so convincing that a sitting prime minister struggled to prove he's alive. You might be next.
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 25, 11:49 AM
|
"Anthropic on Monday launched the most ambitious consumer AI agent to date, giving its Claude chatbot the ability to directly control a user's Mac — clicking buttons, opening applications, typing into fields, and navigating software on the user's behalf while they step away from their desk."
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 25, 11:39 AM
|
Human judgment is a critical factor in making data-informed learning decisions.
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 24, 10:43 AM
|
"As generative artificial intelligence reshapes instructional workflows at colleges and universities, a four-level transparency framework can help education developers calibrate documentation and disclosure practices to support ethical responsibility and maintain student trust."
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 24, 10:34 AM
|
"In conversations across the country, I hear a growing mix of excitement and apprehension about the role of artificial intelligence in education. Many see the potential, yet most also sense a disconnect between what today’s AI tools produce and the kinds of learning experiences we want for young people. This tension is not incidental—it reflects a deeper issue in how AI currently “understands” teaching and learning. Most generative AI tools carry a built-in bias toward traditional, teacher-directed instruction."
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 24, 10:22 AM
|
Given so many conversations in the public sphere about how devices and screen time are affecting developing minds (and adult ones), educators might consider how technology has changed how we live and communicate.
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 24, 10:01 AM
|
"We created the AI Pedagogy Project to help educators engage their students in meaningful conversations about the capabilities and limitations of AI, grounded in hands-on experimentation. Our goal is to support educators, students, and the general public in exploring questions like: How do we make informed, intentional decisions about the role of AI in the classroom? How can students build critical relationships with these tools? And how might imaginative applications of AI enhance learning?"
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 23, 1:32 PM
|
AI has arrived as a powerful, pervasive reality, bringing with it a whirlwind of innovation, new tools, and pressing questions. Here are five practical steps to help your institution navigate this rapidly evolving landscape and accelerate its path to real transformation.
|
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 26, 12:01 PM
|
Can AI truly reason? Discover how the CareerNet initiative uses expert labels to improve autonomous decision-making and bridge the gap in machine logic.
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 26, 11:48 AM
|
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 26, 11:42 AM
|
Students are clearly embracing AI as a learning tool, but they’re also conflicted about what it means for their own learning.
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 26, 11:32 AM
|
"Mikell Taylor, director of robotics strategy at General Motors, discusses next-generation robots and dispels some common myths."
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 25, 12:00 PM
|
"I grew up watching Star Trek. The hologram doctor who could diagnose anything. Data, who could process a universe of information in seconds. The ship's computer that always had the answer. When people ask me if I'm surprised by the rise of AI, my honest answer is no. I've been watching it coming for fifty years, one episode at a time. But here's what I am surprised by. The companies now building real versions of those technologies seem to have missed the most important lesson Star Trek ever taught us."
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 25, 11:50 AM
|
Two years ago the Netherlands banned phones in schools. Now the government wants to go further, pushing to restrict social media for under‑16s.
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 25, 11:41 AM
|
Discover how AI can extend faculty presence in graduate education by enhancing feedback, participation, and support while preserving empathy for adult learners.
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 25, 11:37 AM
|
The Higher Learning Commission's endorsement marks the first time an accreditor has verified the quality of a microcredential provider.
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 24, 10:38 AM
|
"Artificial intelligence (AI) is heavily impacting privacy, creating a new reality for which privacy professionals are largely unprepared. Many AI system vulnerabilities lead to privacy breaches that are highly damaging, undermining the privacy function’s capability to be a major competitive advantage and enhance brand value."
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 24, 10:26 AM
|
"Many people start their work with AI by prompting the machine to imagine it is an expert at the task they want it to perform, a technique that boffins have found may be futile. Persona-based prompting – which involves using directives such as "You're an expert machine learning programmer" in a model prompt – dates back to 2023, when researchers began to explore how role-playing instructions influenced AI models’ output. It's now common to find online prompting guides that include passages like, "You are an expert full-stack developer tasked with building a complete, production-ready full-stack web application from scratch." But academics who have researched this approach report it does not always produce superior results."
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 24, 10:06 AM
|
"The Industrial Revolution didn’t just change what people made — it fundamentally changed how work was organized, who did it, and what society owed the people doing it. We’re standing at a similar inflection point right now, which is a massive cliff where we have to jump before we’re pushed. In the same way the Industrial Revolution rewrote how many things are made, the Intelligence Revolution is rewriting the rules of work, and the companies and leaders who understand history will be the ones who actually navigate it. Everyone else will be improvising."
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 23, 1:36 PM
|
Prospective students are increasingly using AI to decide where to go to school, so it’s critical that institutions adopt and embrace it to increase reach.
|
Scooped by
EDTECH@UTRGV
March 23, 1:31 PM
|
Read about several practices that helped me keep generative AI in learning design productive but still under control.
|
"The next generation of robots may look quite different from the systems showcased in today’s lab demos and videos—but the real shift will be less about appearance than about collaboration."