Many say we are now in a聽fourth industrial revolution, with technological advances fundamentally changing how we聽live and work. Joe聽Qin prefers to聽see the shift as an聽鈥渋ntellectual revolution鈥.
鈥淚t is revolutionising our cognitive ability 鈥 how we聽read, write, listen and translate or聽generate content,鈥 says the president of Lingnan University Hong Kong. It聽is also transforming education and research at聽the liberal arts institution,聽which ranks highly聽for quality education (SDG 4) in the 探花视频聽Impact Rankings.
In the past 10聽to 15 years, Lingnan has focused on the arts. 鈥淭he recent emergence of data science and other interdisciplinary sciences gives us the opportunity to enhance our science side,鈥 says Qin, who plans to steer the university into the digital era.
鈥淪ometimes I聽call it a liberal arts revolution,鈥 he adds.
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Last month, the university opened a new school of data science, five years after launching an undergraduate programme on the subject, and from September all undergraduate students will be required to take a course on generative聽AI. The institution is also in the process of proposing new undergraduate programmes on interdisciplinary fields such as social data science or digital arts.
A year ago, the instinct for many universities was to ban or severely restrict the use of ChatGPT and other AI聽tools on聽campuses because of the risk that students would use it to cheat. While institutions are now generally more accepting of the technology, most still have strict limits on its聽use.
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Lingnan, however, has done the opposite: AI tools are 鈥渇reely available to our students and staff鈥, according to聽Qin. In聽fact, students will sometimes be required to use AI on聽essays or to complete exams or projects, to test whether they are 鈥淎I聽literate鈥. The technological advancements over the past year have only 鈥渞einforced鈥 the university鈥檚 position in embracing the tools, he says.
鈥淚f you don鈥檛 let [students] use it, how can you make sure they will use it properly? The best way is to let them use it while they are studying and on campus and [while they] have the guidance from professors,鈥 he says.
鈥淲e cannot simply ignore it. We want our students to have the skills of the future, not the past.鈥
Qin stresses that it is 鈥渦p to the instructors to form the assignments鈥, but one example he suggests is asking students to share the sequence of prompts they input into ChatGPT and their thought processes behind them, as well as any generated content.
鈥淵ou don鈥檛 always get the answer [you want] the first time you use it. You have to change the way you interact with ChatGPT,鈥 he explains. 鈥淭hat process is actually the way we would use it for our professional work. We want our students to get that training.鈥
While many previous digital advances have been accessible only to highly trained individuals, generative聽AI makes technology 鈥渆asier for the average person to use鈥, says Qin, adding that the changes have been welcomed on campus.
鈥淲e see this as an equaliser, rather than a divider,鈥 he explains.
Qin is just nine months into his tenure as president of Lingnan. The new digital direction for the university was identified by the council before his appointment, and he was deemed a fitting choice to lead the strategy. He certainly seems to tick all the boxes: he is a world-leading data scientist, originally from mainland China, who spent 24聽years in US academia before taking on leadership positions at two other Hong Kong institutions.
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鈥淲ithout the previous experience and understanding, it would be hard for me to figure out how to drive AI for the advantage of Lingnan,鈥 he聽says.
Perhaps unsurprisingly given his expertise, Qin takes a data-driven approach to major strategic decisions 鈥 as well as more prosaic duties, such as managing staff complaints.
鈥淚f colleagues say they teach too much, I聽want to see the data. What鈥檚 the average teaching load, which means how many courses each professor teaches a year? Once we get the data from different faculties, different departments, then you know whether they鈥檙e teaching too many or too few [courses],鈥 he聽says.
鈥淔or anything I聽want, there is data. Even for student homework, it鈥檚 all archived electronically. So it is a聽lot easier to use data now to manage the university.鈥
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Qin has analysed figures on class sizes 鈥 an important metric for liberal arts universities, which tend to favour close interactions between academics and students. He was pleased to discover that there are just 21 students, on average, per class, particularly given that Hong Kong鈥檚 public universities will soon be able to admit twice as many 鈥渘on-local鈥 undergraduate students. The government cap on non-locals will rise from the current 20聽per cent to 40聽per cent in September.
鈥淚f we want to add more students to each class, it鈥檚 not going to create a huge problem for us,鈥 Qin explains. 鈥淲e have room to make it a little bigger and still be healthy.鈥
Last year, Lingnan won the Student Recruitment Campaign of the Year prize at the 探花视频 础飞补谤诲蝉听础蝉颈补, for an initiative that helped it to reverse a downward trend in student applications prior to 2020. Its campaign included the development of 鈥淟ingSpace鈥 鈥 a chatbot game that provides prospective students a preview of its learning experience and replicates the university campus in a virtual environment.
However, not all liberal arts institutions would be feeling buoyant about the prospect of increasing enrolments at a time when there is a wider trend towards STEM programmes.
Some have even argued that liberal arts education cannot survive in Asia, following the closure of Yale-NUS College in聽2021 (the National University of Singapore has since formed NUS College, focusing on interdisciplinary education).
However, Qin says, Asia is still the 鈥済rowing area鈥 for liberal arts education globally, whether at a stand-alone university or a college within a larger institution.
And he believes that the acceleration of generative聽AI makes liberal arts education even more relevant.
鈥淎 lot of the skills-based training will actually be largely replaced by聽AI,鈥 he聽says, citing simultaneous interpretation as one profession that will 鈥渄isappear鈥.
鈥淗owever, it鈥檚 the critical thinking that one would need.鈥
Still, he recognises that that view is not necessarily widely held, even today.
鈥淓specially in China, the first thing that parents worry about is whether their kids can get a job. They still think that studying STEM would give them a聽good job. But I聽don鈥檛 think the future is supporting that,鈥 he says. 鈥淲here you used to need 10聽computer programmers, now you probably just need one鈥hat one surviving [programmer] might use AI a聽lot, and [they] will need to know whether the AI-generated content is suitable.鈥
While Qin is not worried about the future of the liberal arts, he is concerned about ensuring that younger generations continue to receive a rigorous education, so they gain the expertise and the values necessary to work effectively with聽AI.
鈥淔or us as adults, we have already established a knowledge system within an area, [and] we can use it [to] judge whether generated content is聽good or聽not. But imagine鈥 primary school kid 鈥 they don鈥檛 know whether something is trustworthy or just nonsense,鈥 he says.
鈥淲e still need to have a rigorous learning process to bring up kids with a traditional value system. That process cannot be escaped.鈥
探花视频
ellie.bothwell@timeshighereducation.com
This is part of our 鈥淭alking leadership鈥 series with the people running the world鈥檚 top universities about how they solve common strategic issues and implement change. Follow the series here.
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