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Leading through change: (Pt. 3) Preparing students for an AI-shaped future

23 min · 11 de mar de 2026
portada del episodio Leading through change: (Pt. 3) Preparing students for an AI-shaped future

Descripción

In the finale of this three-part episode, the conversation steps back to ask a fundamental question: what is a university degree for in an AI-shaped world? The framework of “stuff, skills, and soul” is introduced to help answer this question and explore how universities can prepare students for an uncertain future of work. While content and technical skills remain essential, the discussion emphasizes the growing importance of human capacities such as judgment, resilience, adaptability, and working with ambiguity. Drawing on research and historical examples, the guests argue that AI is more likely to raise expectations around critical thinking than eliminate work outright, while complicating entry-level pathways and transitions from education to employment. The episode concludes with a call for universities to remain nimble, diverse, and committed to cultivating human purpose in an AI-mediated world. Did you miss the previous episodes? Listen to part 1 [https://teachlearnshare.podbean.com/e/listening-learning-and-experimenting-reimagining-gen-ai-as-opportunity-in-teaching-and-learning-part-13/] and part 2. [https://teachlearnshare.podbean.com/e/leading-through-change-pt-2-addressing-the-challenges-of-gen-ai/] Read the transcript [https://teachingblog.mcgill.ca/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Series-5_Episode-7-Associate-Provosts-PART-3-1.pdf].

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29 episodios

episode Leading through change: (Pt. 3) Preparing students for an AI-shaped future artwork

Leading through change: (Pt. 3) Preparing students for an AI-shaped future

In the finale of this three-part episode, the conversation steps back to ask a fundamental question: what is a university degree for in an AI-shaped world? The framework of “stuff, skills, and soul” is introduced to help answer this question and explore how universities can prepare students for an uncertain future of work. While content and technical skills remain essential, the discussion emphasizes the growing importance of human capacities such as judgment, resilience, adaptability, and working with ambiguity. Drawing on research and historical examples, the guests argue that AI is more likely to raise expectations around critical thinking than eliminate work outright, while complicating entry-level pathways and transitions from education to employment. The episode concludes with a call for universities to remain nimble, diverse, and committed to cultivating human purpose in an AI-mediated world. Did you miss the previous episodes? Listen to part 1 [https://teachlearnshare.podbean.com/e/listening-learning-and-experimenting-reimagining-gen-ai-as-opportunity-in-teaching-and-learning-part-13/] and part 2. [https://teachlearnshare.podbean.com/e/leading-through-change-pt-2-addressing-the-challenges-of-gen-ai/] Read the transcript [https://teachingblog.mcgill.ca/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Series-5_Episode-7-Associate-Provosts-PART-3-1.pdf].

11 de mar de 202623 min
episode Leading through change: (Pt. 2) Addressing the challenges of gen AI artwork

Leading through change: (Pt. 2) Addressing the challenges of gen AI

In part two of this three-part episode, the conversation turns to the hard questions gen AI raises for teaching and assessment. Moving beyond promise and possibility, the guests examine practical and structural challenges facing universities, including privacy, ethics, access, and uneven adoption. They highlight a deeper pedagogical concern: increasingly “frictionless” AI tools may undermine the productive struggle essential to learning, critical thinking, and skill development. The discussion explores what this means for course design and assessment, calling for structural changes that emphasize process, dialogue, and applied learning—while acknowledging faculty workload pressures and the temptation to revert to traditional exams. The episode concludes by underscoring the importance of grounded, community-based faculty support, shared resources, and practical examples that help instructors adapt without starting from scratch.  Read the transcript [https://teachingblog.mcgill.ca/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Series-5_Episode-5-Associate-Provosts-PART-2.pdf] Did you miss part 1? Listen here. [https://teachlearnshare.podbean.com/e/listening-learning-and-experimenting-reimagining-gen-ai-as-opportunity-in-teaching-and-learning-part-13/]

25 de feb de 202645 min
episode Leading through change: (Pt. 1) Reimagining gen AI as opportunity artwork

Leading through change: (Pt. 1) Reimagining gen AI as opportunity

In part one of this three-part episode, senior academic leaders from McGill University, the University of British Columbia, and the University of Toronto reflect on generative AI as a transformative opportunity for teaching and learning in higher education. The conversation moves beyond seeing gen AI solely as a disruption or tool as we explore its potential to fundamentally reshape assessment, course design, student support, accessibility, and institutional practices. Gen AI is highlighted as a powerful catalyst—one that invites universities to re-examine long-standing assumptions about teaching, learning, assessment, and the core mission of higher education itself.   Read the transcript.  [https://teachingblog.mcgill.ca/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Series-5_Episode-5-Associate-Provosts-PART-1-2.pdf]

11 de feb de 202623 min