Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Chat GPT Produces a Disrespectful Cartoon by Accident

I asked Chat GPT to:

Chat GPT generated cartoon,
from a prompt by Tom Worthington,
CC-BY 23 September 2025

'Draw a cartoon of the Australian prime minister as a school child, pointing to palestine on a map of the world, with the foreign minister, Penny Wong as the teacher, saying "Well done Albo!". The caption should be "Australia Recognises Palestine".' 
Curiously, Chat GPT said "I’ll avoid anything offensive or disrespectful", but got the location of Palestine wrong, giving the cartoon more of a sting. This is an aspect of Generative AI we needed to keep in mind and teach students.

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Improving the quality of governance at Australian universites

The Senate Education and Employment Legislation Committee released an Interim report on the Quality of governance at Australian higher education providers, 19 September 2025. The report makes 12 recommendations. While all useful, the recommendations are very narrow and modest in scope. Australian universities are key to the economic future and security of Australia, deserving a much more wide reaching investigation by Parliament. Our universities face threats far larger than in the recent past, including from COVID-19. 

The recommendations call for universities to publish minutes of council meetings, disclose spending on consultants, publish a  conflict-of-interest register and executive annual remuneration reports, and the composition of governing bodies. The Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency's (TEQSA) would then enforce these. None of that seems particularly onerous. 

The third recommendation is a bit more vague, with universities to adopt best-practice meaningful consultations. The fourth is for government to set vice-chancellors and senior executive remuneration. This might be challenged by higher education providers which are private institutions and particularly for-profit companies.

Recommendation 5 & 6 are for a set proportion of members with public administration and higher education expertise, as well as staff and students on councils. Recommendation 7 is for universities ensure respectful treatment of staff and students on governing bodies. However the Australian Parliament is hardly in a position to lecture on workplace culture, given its own poor track record.

One reform I suggested, which was for senior university positions, including VCs, to be elected by the student and staff bodies, was not adopted in the report. 

Australian academics optimising drones for defence

Greetings from the Centre for Advanced Defence Research in Robotics and Autonomous System (CADR-RAS) Webinar, hosted by the University of Adelaide. Those who say our universities are not doing anything of practical value for the economy, or security of the country, should come along. There is scholarship, and there are complicated equations, but these are about how to optimise autonomous systems for defending the nation. The researchers are working on bang for buck, literally.

Sunday, September 21, 2025

Bill Shorten doesn't need to re-imagines universities

In "Bill Shorten ‘re-imagines universities’, with specialist institutions and bespoke degrees", Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra, reports on a speech by their new Vice Chancellor (VC). In this the VC is reported as  calling for a “fundamental re-imagining” of Australia’s universities. But much of what the Canberra VC is describing is routine in the Vocational Education and Training (VET) sector. Students from the Canberra Institute of Technology already undertake their initial training there, before transitioning to University of Canberra. However, there would be value in universities adopting some of the VET approach themselves. The 3 year degree model can be modified to make it more flexible, rather than "broken". 

Australian law already allows for specialist higher education institutions, both universities and vocational education, offering degrees, and run by not-for-profit government and non government bodies, as well as for-profit companies. However, most universities have chosen to expand by offering a broad range of programs and government have allowed them to duplicate what is already available from nearby institutions. At present some specialisation appears to be taking place, with universities shutting down unprofitable programs. However, this might result in them all offering the same limited range of business and STEM.

A more diverse education sector would, as the VC suggests, help with economic resilience and national security. However, our universities need to look to their own resilience first. COVID-19 might just be a small taste of the shocks to come. Our universities need to be ready with online teaching techniques and financial reserves, in case most of the international students leave Australia suddenly due to geopolitical tensions.

Australia's higher education sector already has considerable flexibility. in 2012 I was studying how to teach at the ANU. As part of this I wanted to learn how to teach online, which was uncommon at Canberra's university. With the approval of my ANU supervisor I enrolled for two terms at the University of Southern Queensland, a leading provider of online education. To learn about vocational education techniques, I later enrolled at the Canberra Institute of technology. To learn how to teach international students online, I enrolled as an international student in North America

As well as bolstering the economy with well trained workers, our universities can provide technology for defence. One team of students I was tutoring were testing the advanced phased array radars for Australian warships, and this technology will form the core of Australia's anti-ballistic missile shield. 

Higher education can strengthen the economy by being ready with the research inventions and trained staff needed to respond to threats and exploit opportunities. 

The VC suggested a "new architecture for learning was needed in today’s world". However, I suggest this is one of those areas where our academics have anticipated the need and already have what is needed developed and ready to implement. Some Australian educational institutions already have fast and flexible programs. These are mostly in the vocational education sector, but universities can quickly be brought up to speed. 

The monopoly of the 2 year degree was broken early this year, when the "vocational degree" was introduced. This allows government, private and for-profit vocational institutions to issue job-ready degrees. Those institutions can apply their nested, competency based and  work integrated learning techniques. In this way someone can enroll in a short program to get just enough of a qualification to get their first job. They can then build on that, getting course credit for skills gained at work, progressing through more advanced qualifications to a degree. The worker can then consider postgraduate studies at university.

The VC gave the example of quantum mechanics for defence applications. Australian universities have research programs in this area. The Australian National University spun off a company to provide quantium products for industry and defence.

The Graduate Certificate in Strategic Technologies proposed by the VC is an interesting idea. Canberra already has several institutions with experience in this area. As a defence employee, I attended short training courses at Australian Defence Staff College, and later helped teach at ADFA, through the use of hackathons

As the VC points out there is scope for using AI for Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL). At CIT I learned techniques for evaluating what students already know. I apply these skills at ANU processing applications for course exemptions and credit. This is a very complex process, already computer supported, and requiring teamwork from professional and academic staff. Some AI support would assist. 

In the past I have suggested a portfolio based program, where the student is given a table showing all the skills and knowledge they are required to demonstrate top graduate and all the ways they could do this, including RPL and work integrated learning. But this would be overwhelming if presented as a large spreadsheet and careful step by step help would be needed. There would still be the need for specialist advice to students. I vividly remember using USQ's pre-enrollment system to work through options. I scratched my head and though "what now?". At that point the phone on the desk beside me rang and it was USQ's staff offering help. This was a little spook, but they said they had saw I was having difficulty.

The VC's proposed re-imagining of university I suggest need to look further. The VC suggests areas of teaching STEM, artificial intelligence, & trauma-informed health care. However, these are already areas investigated, researched, planned and being implemented.

Government already subsidies higher education and this model can be applied to micro and shorter credentials. Where there is a shortage government can offer direct subsidies and incentives for industry. However, there is a risk of government and industry micromanaging skills and pushing students into programs which will be obsolete by the time they graduate.

All Australian universities are required to be a bit general. They can't specialise in just one discipline. But they are not required, as the VC suggests, to do everything. Recent criticism of several institutions has been because they are making painful cutbacks, dropping some discipline areas to focus on fewer. 

It is true that Australian universities use prestige in research to market education which has very little to do with that research. However, they do this because it is a very successful marketing strategy. Regional and education focused universities have difficulty coming up with an alternative approach. As a mature-age student from a first-in-family, low SES background I experienced some of these contradictions first hand. 

The VC's proposal for specialist universities, would be part of a Dedawkinsation, which is perhaps already underway. However, Australian governments have a poor track record at picking winners. It might be better to have policy and funding settings which encourage institutions to further specialise.

The VC also suggested creating a pre-Dawkins two-tiered system, with some institutions focused on teaching. I suggest instead policy and funding to promote teaching skills for academics, wherever they teach. It is one of the dirty little secrets of universities that their teach staff are less qualified to teach than those in vocational education, or schools. As a university academic I am one of the exceptions having a MEd. During COVID-19 I was able to quickly pivot to online teaching and assessment. When I colleagues asked me how I could do this with little apparent effort I said "I have a degree in this".

Higher education is important to national security. However, I suggest caution in the VC's suggestion of focusing exclusively on sovereign capability. Australia does have a lead in some areas, such as phased array radars and high speed multi-hull vessels. However, our two most successful current defence projects are partnerships with US companies: the Ghost Bat robot fighter jet and Ghost Shark robot submarine. However, there is no corresponding Ghost Geco robot tank project, and that might be an area for exclusively sovereign capability.


Thursday, September 18, 2025

Can we get the benefits of AI without harm?

Greetings from the Australian National University in Canberra, where Dr. Katy Gero, is speaking at AI & Friends, on "How do we get the benefits of LLMs without causing long-term harm?".They conducted an experiment where student written and AI assisted essays were mixed together and graded by a human marker. The marker couldn't tell which were from AI, and graded the AI submissions slightly higher than the human written ones. 

One insight from this research was the question of the role of writing in learning. Students may be willing to outsource essay writing as they don't see it as a core skill and something taking up time they could use for more important study. The student might use AI to write their idea better. This is a view I have sympathy with, as someone who barles passed English at school and failed French. I require a human editor, or tools for spelling and grammar, to be able to write well enough to be employed. 

This work also raises questions about how people cooperate to produce written works. I suggested Dr. Gero look to the history and politics of open source software for inspiration. 

ps: Will we have an accelerated Peter Principle, with people promoted far beyond their ability, due to AI assistance? ;-)

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Web Accessibility 25 Years after the Sydney Olympics

Sydney Olympics web page without graphics
Yesterday, 15 September, was the 25th anniversary of the opening of the Sydney Olympics. I talked to ABC Canberra Radio about my experience as an expert witness in the Sydney Olympics SOCOG web accessibility case in the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission. I was asked by the lawyers for the complainant, to be one of their two expert witnesses on if the web site was accessible to someone who is blind. The other witness, Jutta Treviranus, had far more expertise in this, but I had done some teaching about it at ANU. As IBM was providing computer systems for the games, I used their accessibility guidelines (which were based on those of W3C) to assess sample pages. I concluded the site did not meet the guidelines, as did Professor Treviranus. 

The most basic problem with the site is easily understood. If you can't see the images, there needs to be alternate text. Unfortunately the Sydney Olympics site did not have text to indicate which sport was which. I suggested the website would be relatively simple and quick to fix. Unfortunately SOCOG did not agree, did not fix it and was fined $20,000. Subsequently BOCG asked me to provide them with advice on the Beijing Olympics website, which I was delighted to do.

Sunday, September 14, 2025

The Future of Higher Education

In 2022 I made a submission to the Higher Education Review. As a relatively junor part time academic, this might seem presumptuous. However, the topic I chose to focus on for my MEd in 2013, was how to teach at a research oriented Australian university, like the Australian National University. The easy part of this was learning how to deal with a regional crisis which could keep students from campus. So I was ready, three years before COVID-19 to teach online myself and teach my colleagues. What was, and is, harder is the nature of a university and how to balance competing priorities, between education and research, community interest and finance. This a pressing issue not only for ANU and Australia's other universities, but for institutions around the world. 

Nanyang Technological University (NTU) and Singapore Management University (SMU) recently announced Mandarin MBAs, targeting international students. Unlike Australia, where international students were gradually added to the domestic cohort, this is a very clear targeting of a market. The questions arising about what effect this will have on local students and how the influx of student fees will change what the university does will be familiar to Australian academics.  

While I read many research papers on education, two books have had the most influence on my thinking: Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance (Robert M. Pirsig, 2006) and "The Open University: History and Evaluation of a Dynamic Innovation in Higher Education" (Walter Perry, 1976). Pirsig, was a technical writer and educator (I role I seem to have fallen into) and wrote of the philosophy of study. Perry was the first Vice-Chancellor of the UK's Open University, which challenged many of the ideas of what a university is and how it is run. 

Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance,  Robert M. Pirsig, 2006
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle
Maintenance, Robert M. Pirsig, 2006
"... the real university exists not as the physical campus, but as a body of reason within the minds of students and teachers ..." From Chapter 13, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, Robert M. Pirsig, 2006

Both Perry and Pirsig, wrote about the vocational end of education and would appear to have little to do with research oriented universities. However, Australian universities were founded explicitly with practical aims in mind: to train professionals and carry out research of value to the community. 

Wednesday, September 10, 2025

VET Option Can Lower Student Stress

Ben Edwards & Jessica Arnup have detailed the stresses Year 12 students face in choosing a career in"New research shows Year 12 students face many pressures – far beyond study and exams (The Conversation, September 8, 2025). However, the situation is not as bleak as the researchers depict. The key to this optimism is the the last part of the article, where the authors note more interest in Vocational Education and Training (VET). This aligns with the government's target for study, which is not for 80% completing university by 2050, but "... 80 per cent of the workforce will have a TAFE qualification or a university degree" (Jason Clare, 18 December 2024). 

More young people want to, and can, go to VET, instead of, or as a preparation, for university. Having a VET option reduces the stress for young people, providing a lower cost option, without high stakes exams, with nested, nationally standardised programs. 

VET students can take a low cost, or free, short course to get an entry level job. They know study & what they do at work, will count towards further qualifications. VET competency based assessment removes the pressure to excel, which exams induce.

There is still an important role for universities. But they should learn from the VET approach

Monday, September 8, 2025

Advanced LinkedIn Workshop at ANU

Dr Fiona Scotney, ANU
Greetings from Dr Fiona Scotney’s Advanced LinkedIn Workshop at ATEM2025. A few hours ago I was in Sydney, and saw a LInkedIn post from Fiona, saying she was speaking on LinkedIn at ATEM2025. I had no idea what ATEM was and only knew her as a Director at The Australian National University. It turns out ATEM is the Association for Tertiary Education Management and they are having their conference at ANU this week.. 

Fiona provided useful tips, such as writing as you talk and keep in mind you are promoting your team and organisation, not just yourself. Tips included ending posts with a call to action. This is straight from the entrepreneurial pitch playbook (you get trained to end with what your audience to do). I have been using social media professionally for longer than the term has existed, but still learned some things.


Thursday, September 4, 2025

AI for Student Discuissions

At the moment I am taking part in a webinar on Instructure's IgniteAI. Today's topic is how to use AI to improve student discussions and feedback. This is to enhance the Canvas Learning Management System. Canvas are being modest in the claims for what AI can do for education, using terms like "We are currently developing ... to help ...", rather than saying this is a proven product which can replace the teacher. But the killer application is, I suggest is creating worksheets and quizzes based on your course content. These are useful, easy, quick and reasonably safe application of AI.

Instructure is also working on accessibility test and remediation features. This is possible with third party tools, but it will be handy to have it built in. However, I suggest learning designers still need basic training in accessibility. 

Insight is also providing a general purpose AI tool for the teacher, similar to that provided for office packages and software development tools. Insight claims to be able to use this to identify students needing extra help and provide them with material. One interesting point is if students also get a version of the AI tool to help them. This could be thought of as AI with trainer wheels. 

IgnightAI can be used to chart data from Canvas. This worries me a little, with academics and administrators coming up with correct, but misleading, charts. While much is written about the value of analysis of student data, this is not a substitute for educational training. 

Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Tech for Social Support

FW at AIE, 
Photo by Tom Worthington, 
CC-BY, 3 September 2025
Greetings from the Academy of Interactive Entertainment (AIE), hosting Canberra Innovation Network's First Wednesday pitch night. There is a theme of enterprises supporting social connection this evening. This is very different to the typical view of tech entrepreneurship. Before the pitches I met some who helps explain tech to the public and the author of a locally set adventure novel. The are AI specialists here as well 

Monday, September 1, 2025

IDEATE Summit 2025

Greetings from the inaugural IDEATE Summit at the Australian National University. The Vice Chancellor opened proceedings with a St Crispin's Day type speech. She talked passionately about the difficulties of opening university up to a more diverse range of students and staff. As a first in family university student from a low SES background, with limited literacy, I have a direct interest in this as well as having studied the topic as an educator (ironically I typed "optic" rather than topic, before the spell checker intervened). 

The Summit is intended to be an annual event for leaders from in computer science and engineering teaching to work on more inclusion and more ralivant skills for graduates:

"understanding the current state of diversity in university technology courses;

sharing lessons learned and putting success stories into context for initiatives across universities; and

collaborating on ways to overcome barriers to inclusive learning, or to recruiting greater diversity among students and staff." From: IDEATE Summit, 2025

My approach to inclusion at university is to provide online and blended options. As well as making access easier, the limitation of online learning design requires a more structured, more explicit approach which I found helped me as a student. Also I would like to see more students start in the Vocational Education Training (VET) sector, before transitioning to university. We also need to explicitly teach and test soft skills: how to give a presentation, organise a team ... 

ps: One of the presenters said they had to "reset the North Star" of their organisation. I had to look this up, as I am from the southern hemisphere.