> ,,, the greatest nuisance that I associate with AI is not student cheating but administrative advocacy. The explosion of AI hype has led to administrators going much further... These kinds of programs elevate public-relations hype over the academic expertise of faculty.

> The greatest potential threat to academic freedom posed by AI comes from precisely this kind of administrative encouragement... the pressure on an untenured English professor to become an AI advocate would still be enormous. According to that same story, the entire initiative stems from the appointment of a new provost there, flying in the face of the AAUP’s guidance that the faculty should have primary responsibility for the curriculum.

aaup.org/issue/spring-2026/ai-…

#AINuisance #AdministrationNuisances #UniversityAdministration

Paul Goodman decades ago warned about "administration" (bureaucracy? like in David Graeber's *Utopia of Rules* ) taking over not just the university but the thinking of the students and professors... Back then he may have been writing in the context of grading, some professors just gave all As or all Cs.. Sounds awful people should do things because their worthwhile not to get carrots or avoid sticks. Alfie Kohn can shore up our confidence for rejecting the carrot and stick approach with people.. i wouldn't be surprised if it's not a good approach with donkeys either...
@bsmall2

> ... ChatGPT is not “a clear inflection point in the history of higher education,” because with just a few adjustments professors can continue to teach with largely the same methods and goals that they have always had. Nevertheless, too many university administrators and faculty members, deceived by rhetoric that originated in Silicon Valley, have overreacted to the arrival of artificial intelligence.
https://www.aaup.org/issue/spring-2026/ai-nuisance
#AINuisance #ProfessorSalami #AISalami #UniversityAdministration