LSI Insights - Future of Higher Education
Beyond grades: what signals employers will trust in an AI-proliferated market
Grades have long acted as a shorthand for capability, consistency, and potential. In an AI-proliferated market, that shorthand is under strain. When high-quality outputs can be produced with assistance, the gap widens between what a credential certifies and what employers need to trust. The question is not whether grades still matter, but what else must carry evidential weight.
Executive summary As AI becomes embedded in knowledge work, the reliability of grades as a signal of independent capability weakens, even while demand for trustworthy signals grows. Employers may shift towards evidence that is harder to synthesise: verified work samples, supervised performance, and judgement under uncertainty. Higher education faces a governance-level choice about whether to defend legacy measures, redesign assessment as proof, or build new compacts with employers. None of these paths is risk-free, and their trade-offs deserve clearer evidence.
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