In their article, “AI in Informal and Formal Education: A Historical Perspective,” published in the inaugural 2025 issue of AI-Enhanced Learning1, Glen Bull, N. Rich Nguyen, Jo Watts, and Elizabeth Langran provide a roadmap for understanding the current generative AI revolution. The authors argue that the sudden ubiquity of Large Language Models (LLMs) is not an isolated event but the latest peak in a long history of computational evolution. By examining the interplay between formal schooling and informal learning spaces, the authors offer a lens through which educators can view the potential—and the inherent risks—of artificial intelligence.
Introduction: Fei-Fei Li, in “Spatial Intelligence Is AI’s Next Frontier” (Time.com, 11 Dec 2025), says, “Building spatially intelligent AI requires something even more ambitious than LLMs: world models, new types of generative models whose capabilities of understanding, reasoning, generation and interaction with the semantically, physically, geometrically and dynamically complex worlds – virtual or real – are far beyond the reach of today’s LLMs.” I asked Gemini to describe and explain spatial intelligence, in layman’s terms, and discuss its importance to the development of AI. -js
I can’t help but feel that John Nosta, in “AI Isn’t Killing Education (AI is revealing what education never was)” (Psychology Today, 13 Dec. 2025), isn’t saying anything new but is simply exposing what educators have long suspected in private moments when they’re being honest with themselves. Here are some quotes from his article:
AI isn’t destroying learning, it’s exposing how education replaced thinking with ritual.
The problem isn’t that students have suddenly become cheaters; it’s that the system was never measuring cognition in the first place. It was measuring costly performance and mistaking it for learning.
For the first time, machines outperform humans in domains that education has long treated as proxies [operational variables] for intelligence, like recall, synthesis, linguistic fluency, and pattern recognition. That shift does not eliminate learning, but it does destabilize a system that equated those outputs with understanding.
What AI actually breaks is a Pavlovian model of education that has dominated for more than a century.
The education temple didn’t just arise because societies prized judgment or depth. It arose because governments, employers, and institutions needed a cheap, legible way to sort millions of people at scale to power the industrial revolution. Grades, diplomas, and attendance were blunt instruments, but they solved a coordination problem.
Introduction: Bryan Walsh, in “We’re running out of good ideas. AI might be how we find new ones” (Vox, 13 Dec. 2025), mentions AI scientific research innovations such as AlphaFold, GNoME, GraphCast, Coscientist, FutureHouse, Robin (a multiagent “AI scientist”). I asked Gemini to expand on them. -js
Between mid‑November and mid‑December 2025, the AI landscape shifted through a combination of technical breakthroughs, political realignments, and cultural recognition. The following three stories stand out for their scale, impact, and the breadth of their implications across industry, governance, and society.
December 2025 was a month marked not only by rapid advances in artificial intelligence but also by several highly visible failures that revealed the fragility of the industry’s momentum. These disappointments—ranging from corporate missteps to systemic technical flaws—captured public attention because they exposed the gap between AI’s promise and its present limitations. Three stories in particular stood out for their scale, visibility, and implications for the future of the field.
JS: Hi, Claude. Sam Kriss, in “Why Does A.I. Write Like … That?” (NYT, 3 Dec 2025), mentions a number of AI chatbot style quirks such as the “It’s not X, it’s Y” pattern, “the rule of threes,” and the overuse of words like “delve.” He implies that AI is unable to break these habits. Question for you: Can AI be trained to avoid these annoying quirks?
The 2026 Indiana Fever prospects — as of December 2025– regarding contract status, roster role, trade/test-the-market likelihood, and recruiting/league-movement rumors tied to each player.
Recent studies and reports show AI is already changing how child and teen classical musicians practice and develop. AI-powered apps give rapid, objective feedback, personalize practice paths, support goal-setting and self-regulated learning, and (in controlled studies) produce measurable gains in confidence and performance compared with traditional, teacher-only practice.
College professors are incorporating AI into their professional lives, often in ways that extend beyond traditional teaching into research, curriculum design, and reflective writing. For November-December 2025, here are three inspiring cases: Matt Kinservik at the University of Delaware, who weaves AI into his writing instruction to foster critical skills; Jennifer Chen at Kean University, who leverages AI in her educational research to pioneer ethical applications; and Zach Justus at California State University, Chico, who employs AI in his communication work to enhance evaluation and mentorship.
The original five-issue framing from the November report still holds, but every item has deepened and a few new flashpoints have emerged that change the tactical picture on the ground. What’s changed for December is intensity and specificity: (a) the federal/state enforcement axis has added concrete actions (eg., a draft State Department list of 38 institutions and new Education Department guidance); (b) programmatic harm has moved from threat to real, quantifiable cuts (over 100 TRIO program cancellations and continuing freezes); and (c) a new wave of campus-level legal conflicts and take-downs (student publications suspended at the University of Alabama; a Liberty Justice Center lawsuit against the University of Arizona) have become the brightest flashpoints. See The Guardian and Inside Higher Ed for the State Department/partnership reporting and the TRIO coverage. (The Guardian)
“Google … released a new version of its Gemini AI model last month [August 2025] that surpassed OpenAI on industry benchmark tests and sent the search giant’s stock soaring. Gemini’s user base has been climbing since the August release of an image generator, Nano Banana, and Google said monthly active users grew from 450 million in July to 650 million in October” (Berber Jin, 2 Dec 2025).
Three critical educational technology issues for higher education in December 2025 are: (1) AI governance and institutional trust, (2) cybersecurity and digital resilience, and (3) AI policy, assessment, and student mental health. Each is already sharply defined in November 2025 articles that document why these problems matter for the coming term.etcjournal+3
Introduction: Elon Musk predicted, at the US-Saudi Forum 19 Nov 2025, that “work will be optional” in approximately 10-to-20 years as a result of advances in AI technology. I asked ChatGPT to search the current (2025) literature for (1) the three strongest arguments FOR Musk’s prediction and (2) the three strongest arguments AGAINST his prediction. I added that the arguments need not refer to Musk or the US-Saudi forum. -js
Introduction: On Thanksgiving Day 2025, I asked ChatGPT to identify ten individuals in the world that we should be thanking for significant contributions to the growth of AI in 2025. -js
The field of AI is heading into December 2025 with three urgent decisions: how to govern frontier AI models, how to handle the open‑source versus closed‑source race, and how to expand AI compute without blowing through energy, water, and climate constraints. Each of these comes with big power struggles between governments and tech companies, and the choices made in the next few weeks will shape who leads AI, how safe it is, and who gets access.anecdotes+2
Introduction: I asked Claude to review articles published in the last three months that focused on effective leadership styles for the AI era. Based on the three selections, I asked for generalizations about ideal leadership and a definition for this new leadership style. -js
Research suggests several AI trends are gaining traction in specialized tech communities and industries during November 2025, though they haven’t yet captured widespread public attention. These include advancements that could reshape how AI integrates into workflows, infrastructure, and user experiences, but evidence leans toward them remaining niche for now due to technical complexity and limited mainstream adoption. Here are the top five, selected based on mentions in recent reports and discussions:
“As Andrej Karpathy just wrote, humanity is having first contact with a type of intelligence that does not come from biology, evolution, fear, hunger, status, or shame. For the first time in history, we are dealing with a mind that isn’t an animal. We just haven’t adjusted our thinking to match. Human intelligence isn’t the default – it’s a local anomaly. For our entire existence, we’ve assumed that our way of thinking is the template for intelligence itself. It isn’t. It’s just the only version we’ve ever met…. Organisations often do things that make no commercial sense: [1] meetings with fifteen people because exclusion feels threatening, [2] decisions delayed because no-one wants to be wrong first, [3] brilliant ideas softened into mediocrity so no-one gets upset, [4] and vanity projects that limp on long after the data has declared them dead…. AI isn’t trying to be human – and it isn’t trying to be anything at all. It simply optimises whatever objective it is given. And that is the key thing that most people keep fumbling over…. A system can generate brilliant strategies without wanting power. It can persuade without caring about influence. It can outperform a human without dreaming of replacing them. Ability is not agency. Agency only emerges if we design it – by giving systems goals, tools, and persistence. As my friend Dr Rami Mukhtar always says: AI HAS NO AGENCY” (Constantine Frantzeskos, 25 Nov 2025).
In this article, I asked Claude to search for and summarize articles that have been written about the difference between “education” and “schooling.” In grad school, in the mid-1980s, Professor Solomon Jaeckel, University of Hawaiʻi at Manoa, began his course with the question, “What is the difference between schooling and education?” And throughout the semester, whenever we hit the wall in discussions about issues in educational foundations, he brought up that refrain, “What is the difference between schooling and education?” We danced around it throughout the semester but never got his nod, and he never answered it for us. He once told us a joke about finding, scribbled on his classroom chalkboard before a final exam, “This, too, shall pass.” We all thought it referred to his tough course and exams, but now I’m thinking he meant the chalkboard, classroom, and college itself. In short, schooling becomes education when it takes on a broader meaning. -js
I asked Claude, Gemini, ChatGPT, and Grok to search for and select critical articles on AI in higher ed published in November 2025. Out of their selections, I chose and ranked the 10 best. -js
tsuzumi 2. “Traditional large language models require dozens or hundreds of GPUs, creating electricity consumption and operational cost barriers that make AI deployment impractical for many organisations…. NTT’s [Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation] recent launch of tsuzumi 2, a lightweight large language model (LLM) running on a single GPU, demonstrates how businesses are resolving this constraint – with early deployments showing performance matching larger models and running at a fraction of the operational cost…. More significantly, on-premise deployment [Tokyo Online University] addresses data privacy concerns that prevent many educational institutions from using cloud-based AI services that process sensitive student information…. NTT’s tsuzumi 2 deployment demonstrates that sophisticated AI implementation doesn’t require hyperscale infrastructure – at least for organisations whose requirements align with lightweight model capabilities” (Dashveenjit Kaur, 20 Nov 2025).
To avoid tell-tale AIstyle1 in your writing, see “Wikipedia: Signs of AI writing” (tip from Russell Brandom, 20 Nov 2025). Warning signs: (1) Undue emphasis on symbolism, legacy, and importance. (2) Undue emphasis on notability, attribution, and media coverage. (3) Superficial analyses. (4) Promotional and advertisement-like language. (5) Didactic, editorializing disclaimers. (6) Section summaries. (7) Outline-like conclusions about challenges and future prospects. (8) Leads treating Wikipedia lists or broad article titles as proper nouns. This is just the tip of the AIstyle iceberg. For much more, see the Wikipedia article. -js
Introduction: The following informal transcript was grabbed off a YouTube video this afternoon, Nov 19, 2025. I relied on the audio and CC. I focused on Elon Musk’s and Jensen Huang’s talks. I omitted the introductions, host’s comments, and small talk. I didn’t have the time or resources to review and edit, so expect typos and possible errors. -js