🇺🇸Daily News on AI on Education and Technology|Publisher: Mikel Amigot
iblnews.org
TOP NEWSPLATFORMSVIEWSEVENTS

Anthropic Launches Claude for Education In AWS Marketplace

Anthropic’s Claude for Education offering was made available in AWS Marketplace as a software-as-a-service solution this month. Claude for Enterprise and the Financial Analysis Solution were also released at the same space. AWS Marketplace’s main advantage is the streamlined procurement and billing process. According to the company, "Claude for Education equips every student with an adaptive study companion, faculty with an AI assistant for creating engaging teaching materials, and staff with an AI collaborator for tracking and analyzing student progress." Claude for Education uses Socratic questioning to guide students toward answers rather than providing direct responses. It includes single sign-on (SSO), native integrations with GitHub, Google Workspace, and Canvas LTI (with Panopto and Wiley integrations coming soon), and custom integrations through the Model Context Protocol (MCP). The pre-built MCP integrations include Atlassian (Jira/Confluence), Zapier, Linear, and Asana. It adds a 200K token context window, primarily for analysis of complex academic materials and research tasks in a single conversation, enterprise-grade security, and compliance. For example, a research team can upload multiple academic papers, datasets, and their own notes into a single Claude conversation. Claude maintains full context across all documents, enabling comprehensive analysis and synthesis that would typically require hours of manual work. Antropic highlighted that its key use cases include: Academic instruction and learning: Socratic questioning through Learning Mode Faculty support: Course development and content creation Research support: Literature review and data analysis assistance Student success support: Progress tracking, early intervention strategies, and personalized learning paths —— • Claude for Education in AWS Marketplace • Kim Majerus’s keynote at the AWS Imagine: Education, State, and Local Government conference.

Anthropic Launches Claude for Education In AWS Marketplace
Canvas LMS Adds to Its Platform an Agentic Solution, 'IgniteAI'

Canvas LMS Adds to Its Platform an Agentic Solution, 'IgniteAI'

Satya Nadella Explains the 9,000-Employee Layoff While Microsoft Thrives

Satya Nadella Explains the 9,000-Employee Layoff While Microsoft Thrives

Figma Makes Its AI Coding Tool 'Make' Available to All Users

Figma Makes Its AI Coding Tool 'Make' Available to All Users

MIT Launches 'Learn', an AI-Enabled Non-Degree Platform with Free Courses and Resources

MIT Launches 'Learn', an AI-Enabled Non-Degree Platform with Free Courses and Resources

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology introduced this month MIT Learn, an AI-based platform featuring a personalized website with over 12,700 non-degree learning resources, most of which are available for free. "MIT Learn marks the beginning of an ambitious project that aims to redefine how MIT distributes knowledge and connects with learners worldwide," explained the institution. Created by MIT Open Learning, this lifelong learning platform features introductory and advanced courses, upskilling and reskilling programs, and other resources, including videos, podcasts, "all for every stage of your learning journey," according to the institution. Open Learning’s product offerings comprise OpenCourseWare, MITx, and MicroMasters programs. The AI-enabled assistant, called “AskTim”, helps learners find courses and resources aligned with their personal and professional goals. It also provides a summary of a course’s structure, topics, and expectations, enabling more informed decisions before enrollment. This AI agent can answer users' questions about lectures, create flashcards of key concepts, and provide instant summaries. The tutor guides the learner through problem sets, leading them toward the next step without revealing the answers. The platform features sophisticated search, browsing, and discovery capabilities, complemented by the “Ask Tim” bot. However, the AI assistant has been introduced in a limited set of courses and modules as the MIT Open Learning team wants to gather insights and improve the learning experience before expanding more broadly. For example, in signature courses such as Molecular Biology: DNA Replication and Repair, Genetics: The Fundamentals, and Cell Biology: Transport and Signaling, learners can interact with an AI assistant by asking questions about a lecture, requesting flashcards of key concepts, and obtaining instant summaries. Dimitris Bertsimas, Vice Provost for Open Learning, explained, “MIT Learn elevates learning with personalized recommendations powered by AI, guiding each learner toward deeper understanding. It is a stepping stone toward a broader vision of making these opportunities even more accessible to global learners through one unified learning platform.” "MIT Learn is a whole new front door to the Institute," added Christopher Capozzola, Senior Associate Dean for Open Learning. "It transforms how people engage with what we offer digitally." Former Provost Cynthia Barnhart, who, under her direction, developed MIT Learn in cooperation with Sloan Executive Education and Professional Education, stated that this project is "the latest step in a long tradition of the Institute providing innovative ways for learners to access knowledge.” "This AI-enabled platform delivers on the Institute’s commitment to help people launch into learning journeys that can unlock life-changing opportunities." MIT became the first higher education institution to provide educational resources free of charge to anyone in the world in 2001. Today, 24 years later, the institution advances with MIT Learn, its "mission to disseminate knowledge globally."

Columbia University's Agreement with The White House Sets a Precedent For Other Colleges

Columbia University's Agreement with The White House Sets a Precedent For Other Colleges

The Trump administration's deal with Columbia University in New York City has put leaders at Ivy League universities and other college campuses nationwide in a tough spot. Institutions are facing the possibility of seeing research funding paused. President Donald Trump has made it clear he won't tolerate a liberal imposition at America's most prestigious colleges and intends to reshape them accordingly. On July 23, Columbia University agreed to pay fines of over $220 million and signed on to a list of other concessions related to admissions, academics, and hiring practices. The White House, which has halted billions in research grants to several schools, said it envisions the Columbia deal as the first of many such agreements. Education Secretary Linda McMahon called it a blueprint for other institutions to follow. "Columbia’s reforms are a roadmap for elite universities that wish to regain the confidence of the American public," Linda McMahon said in a statement. In addition to Columbia University, other Ivy League schools are striking deals with the Trump administration. On July 1, the University of Pennsylvania entered into an agreement ending a civil rights investigation brought by the U.S. Department of Education. In February, the agency accused Penn of violating Title IX, the primary sex discrimination law governing schools, when it allowed Lia Thomas, a transgender swimmer, to compete in 2022. As part of the deal, the White House said it would restore Penn's research funding. In return, the university apologized to cisgender athletes who swam against Thomas. The university also agreed to ban transgender women from sports. This month, President Trump hinted he believes Harvard University may still be open to coming to a deal. At Cornell, the government paused more than $1 billion. At Brown, it froze $510 million, and at Princeton, it stopped more than $210 million. Of the eight Ivy League schools, only two – Dartmouth College and Yale University – have avoided targeted federal funding freezes.

ChatGPT Introduced "Study Mode", a New Way to Learn that Offers Step-By-Step Guidance

ChatGPT Introduced "Study Mode", a New Way to Learn that Offers Step-By-Step Guidance

Brown University Will Spend $50M on State Programs to See Its Federal Funding Restored

Brown University Will Spend $50M on State Programs to See Its Federal Funding Restored

Learners Use AI to Redesigning Instructional Experiences in Real-Time

Learners Use AI to Redesigning Instructional Experiences in Real-Time

OpenAI Embeds Its Tool Into Canvas LMS, Allowing Instructors to Create Assignments With AI

OpenAI Embeds Its Tool Into Canvas LMS, Allowing Instructors to Create Assignments With AI

OpenAI announced this week a partnership with Instructure's Canvas LMS under its program called IgniteAI, to allow teachers to create AI-powered assignments and other instructional activities. Meanwhile, students can engage with the AI assistant, and as they interact, learning evidence is captured and returned to the Gradebook. Steve Daly, CEO of Instructure, said, "This collaboration with OpenAI showcases our ambitious vision: creating a future-ready ecosystem that fosters meaningful learning and achievement at every stage of education." The first tool integrated into Canvas LMS is a new type of assignment called the LLM-Enabled Assignment, which allows teachers to define, through text prompts, how AI interacts with students, set specific learning goals and objectives, and determine what evidence of learning it should track. Through this tool, students submit their assignments and create visible learning evidence that teachers can use, as it’s mapped to the learning objectives, rubrics, and skills. Shiren Vijiasingam, Chief Product Officer at Instructure, said that "teachers will gain a high-level view of overall progress, key learning indicators, and potential gaps, each supported by clear evidence." "They can then dive into specific indicators to see exactly where and how a student demonstrated the required understanding in the conversation." “What’s powerful about this tool is that it enables educators to assess the student’s learning process — not just the final outcome,” said Vijiasingam. “This is only the first in a set of tools we will develop with OpenAI over the coming quarters." • Instructure announces the launch of IgniteAI agent at InstructureCon 25.  • rProfessors: I watched Instructure's Canvas AI demo last week. I have thoughts (Reddit, July 31, 2025) "I've seen this topic discussed a few times now in relation to Instructure's recent press release about partnering with OpenAI on a new integration. I attended the InstructureCon conference last week, where among other things Instructure gave a tech demo of this integration to a crowd of about 2,500 people. I don't think they've released video of this demo publicly yet, but it's not like they made us sign an NDA or anything, so I figured I'd write up my notes. I'm recreating this based on hastily-written notes, so they may not be perfectly accurate recreations of what we were shown. During the demonstrations they made it clear that these were very much still in development, were not finished products, and were likely to change before being released. It was also a carefully controlled, partially pre-programmed tech demo. They did disclose which parts were happening live and which parts were pre-recorded or simulated. In the tech demo they showed off three major examples. 1. Course Admin Assistant. This demo had a chat interface similar to every LLM, but its function was specifically limited to canvas functions. The example they showed was typing in a prompt like, "Emily Smith has an accommodation for a two-day extension on all assignments, please adjust her access accordingly," and the AI was able to understand the request, access the "Assign To" function of every assignment in the class, and give the Emily student extended access. In the demo it never took any action without explicitly asking the instructor to approve the action. So it gave a summary of what it proposed to do, something like "I see twenty-five published assignments in this class that have end dates. Would you like me to give Emily separate "Assign to" Until Dates with two extra days of access in each of these assignments?" It's not clear what other functions the AI would have access to in a canvas course, but I liked the workflow, and I liked that it kept the instructor in the loop at every stage of the process. The old "AI Sandwich," principle. Every interaction with an AI tool should with a human and end with a human. I also liked that it was not engaging with student intellectual property at any point in this process, it was targeted solely at course administration settings. My analysis: I think this feature could be genuinely cool and useful, and a great use case for AI agents in Canvas. Streamline the administrative busywork so that the instructor can spend more time on instruction and feedback. Interesting. Promising. Want to see more. AI Assignment Assistant. Another function was a little more iffy, and again a tightly controlled demo that didn't provide many details. The demo tech guy created a new blank Assignment in Canvas, and opened an AI assistant interface within that assignment. He prompted it with something like, "here is a PDF document of my lesson. turn it into an assignment that focuses on the Analysis level of Bloom's Taxonomy," and then he uploaded his document. We were not shown what the contents of the document looked like, so this is very vague, but it generated what looked like a competent-enough analysis paper assignment. One thing that I did like about this is that whenever the AI assistant generates any student-facing content, it surrounds it with a purple box that denotes AI-generated content, and that purple box doesn't go away unless and until the instructor actually interacts with that content and modifies or approves it. So AI Sandwich again, you can't just give it a prompt and walk away. The demo also showed the user asking for a grading rubric for the assignment, which the AI also populated directly into the Rubric tool, and again every level, criteria, etc. was highlighted in purple until the user interacted with that item. My analysis: This MIGHT useful in some circumstances, with the right guardrails. Plenty of instructors are already doing things like this anyway, in LLMs that have little to no privacy or intellectual property protections, so this could be better, or at least less harmful. But there's a very big, very scary devil in the details here, and we don't have any details yet. My unanswered questions about this part surrounds data and IP. What was the AI trained on in order to be able to analyze and take action on a lesson document? What did it do with that document as it created an assignment? Did that document then become part of its training data, or not? All unknown at this point. AI Conversation Assignment. They showed the user creating an "AI Conversation" assignment, in which the instructor set up a prompt, something like "You are to take on the role of the famous 20th century economist John Keynes, and have a conversation with the student about Supply and Demand." Presumably you could give it a LOT of specific guidance on how the AI is to guide and respond to the conversation, but they didn't show much detail. Then they showed a sequence of a student interacting with the AI Keynes inside of an LLM chat interface within a Canvas assignment. It showed the student trying to just game the AI and ask for the answer to the fundamental question, and the AI told it that the goal was learning, not getting the answer, or something like that. Of course, there's nothing here that would stop a student from just copying and pasting the Canvas AI conversation into a different AI tool, and pasting the response back into Canvas. Then it's just AI talking to AI, and nothing worthwhile is being accomplished. Then the part that I disliked the most was that it showed the instructor SpeedGrader view of this Conversation assignment, which showed a weird speedometer interface showing "how engaged" the student was in the conversation. It did allow the instructor to view the entire conversation transcript, but that was hidden underneath another button. Grossest of all, it gave the instructor the option of asking for the AI's suggested grade and written feedback for the assignment. Again, AI output was purple and wanted instructor refinement, but… gross. My analysis: This example, I think, was pure fluff and hype. The worst impulses of AI boosterism. It wasn't doing anything that you can't already do in copilot or ChatGPT with a sufficient starting prompt. It paid lip service to academic integrity but didn't show any actual integrity guardrails. The amount of AI agency being used was gross. The faith it put in the AI's ability to actually generate accurate information without oversight is negligent. I think there's a good chance that this particular function is either going to never see the light of day, or is going to be VERY different after it goes through some refinement and feedback processes."  

The White House Unveiled an AI Action Plan Aiming to Boost Innovation in the U.S.

The White House Unveiled an AI Action Plan Aiming to Boost Innovation in the U.S.

The Trump administration unveiled a 28-page AI Action Plan that outlines over 90 policy actions for rapidly developing AI technology, aiming to boost U.S. innovation while removing "bureaucratic red tape" and "ideological bias." The White House has positioned the expansion of AI infrastructure and investments in the United States as a way to stay ahead of China. "We believe we're in an AI race, and we want the United States to win that race," said David Sacks, the Trump administration's Crypto Czar. This AI plan promises to build data centre infrastructure and promote American technology, but was panned by critics who consider it an ideological flex by the White House. The plan also calls for federal agencies to review and repeal policies that hinder AI development, and to encourage the use of AI in both the government and the private sector. President Donald Trump signed three related executive orders on Wednesday. One order promotes the international export of U.S.-developed AI technologies, while another aims to root out what the administration describes as "woke" or ideologically biased AI systems. "American development of AI systems must be free from ideological bias or engineered social agendas," the White House said. "With the right government policies, the United States can solidify its position as the leader in AI and secure a brighter future for all Americans." Crypto Czar Sacks added that the plan is partially focused on preventing AI technology from being "misused or stolen by malicious actors" and will "monitor for emerging and unforeseen risks from AI". "AI is a revolutionary technology that's going to have profound ramifications for both the economy and national security," Sacks said. "It's just very important that America continues to be the dominant power in AI." Critics argued that the plan was a giveaway to Big Tech. "The White House AI Action plan was written by and for tech billionaires, and will not serve the interests of the broader public," said Sarah Myers West, co-executive director of the AI Now Institute. In 2023, Trump's predecessor, Joe Biden, signed an executive order that established safety and security standards governing the use of AI in the federal government—an order that Trump rescinded on the first day of his presidency in January. Days later, Trump signed an executive order that called for accelerated AI development, the removal of ideological bias, and today's AI action plan, for which it sought public comment. Last month, Trump allowed technology giant Nvidia to resume sales of its high-end AI chips to China, reversing his administration's prior ban on sales of Nvidia's H20 chips to Beijing.

......

Today's Summary

Sunday, November 23, 2025

Education technology today is marked by rising AI adoption among educators and innovative personalized learning approaches.

Video News

Loading videos...

Loading videos...

Today in AI & EdTech

Sunday, November 23, 2025

AI is transforming the education technology landscape as more teachers adopt intelligent tools, driving forward and adaptive learning experiences.

AI & EdTech Videos

OpenAI Launches Educational GPT Model

OpenAI Launches Educational GPT Model

Adaptive Learning Platforms Show 40% Improvement

Adaptive Learning Platforms Show 40% Improvement

Microsoft Education Copilot Beta Launch

Microsoft Education Copilot Beta Launch

Today in Education

U.S. Department of Education Announces New Funding for STEM Programs

The initiative aims to support science, technology, engineering, and mathematics education.

Global Education Summit Highlights Digital Learning Innovations

Leaders from around the world discuss the future of remote and hybrid learning models.

New Study Shows Benefits of Early Childhood Education

Research indicates significant long-term academic and social advantages for students.

Sections

    About Our News Agency

      Stay Updated

      Get the latest education technology news delivered to your inbox.

      IBL News

      This work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY 4.0). IBL News is a nonprofit initiative founded in 2014.

      CC BY 4.0
      © 2025 Class Generation, LLC d.b.a. ibl.ai, ibleducation.com and iblnews.org - 845 Third Avenue, 6th Fl, New York, NY 10022 - Tel 646-722-2616 - Made in U.S.A. • Terms of Use • Privacy Policy