
Institutional Access
Your institution provides full access to Inside Higher Ed content.
Institutional Access
Your institution provides full access to Inside Higher Ed content.
The head of learning initiatives for Google Deepmind says debates about use of new technologies should focus on how to embrace more holistic teaching methods.
By Juliette Rowsell for Times Higher Education
iStock/bigtunaonline
Banning the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in higher education risks shutting down conversations about how to innovate in pedagogy, according to a learning expert at Google Deepmind.
Miriam Schneider, director of learning initiatives in the technology firm’s main AI research division, said that AI does not have to “change pedagogy” but instead can “reinforce it.”
As many universities grapple with how best to approach the use of AI in assessments and learning, the “confrontation” between “what should remain uniquely human” and what can be done by AI “can have a meaningful role to play,” she told Times Higher Education.
“It basically gives us this opportunity for reflective pause and to be able to grapple with some of those bigger questions that we mostly just sort of assumed,” she said.
“I think it will accelerate conversations around what the design of school systems will look like to best embrace more holistic learning for students, opposed to just knowledge transfer,” said Schneider, who has worked across Google for over 20 years. She moved to Deepmind, the company’s main AI research laboratory that funds various scholarships and funding for university research, last September.
“I think those are important conversations to have,” she said. “I think the risk is we don’t end up having them if we make it all or nothing.”
Conversations are increasingly focusing on “what do future models of learning and education look like as the technology becomes more advanced,” and Schneider said “interestingly it has almost less and less to do with the technology itself, instead thinking about the roles between teachers and students.”
“How do you center humanity? Center connections and relationships? How do you increase motivation? There are some places where technology will be great at that, and some places where it will not.”
Following criticisms that large language models (LLMs) were being misused by students to cheat in academic settings, tech companies have launched various “study modes” to counter this. Google’s version, “guided learning” mode on Gemini, is powered by its LearnLM methodology which underpins Google’s education products, including Google Classroom.
Speaking to THE at last month’s World Education Forum, Schneider said the question for edtech makers is “how you bring the outside in” to “inform” how AI is optimized for learning.
But in order to do that, “it requires you to treat learning as a science and that means there are core fundamental truths around learning science that we must anchor on and build the technology around. Not the other way.”
Expecting an LLM to “be good at teaching and learning” without any prior training is like “taking any stranger off the street, putting them in front of a classroom and saying, ‘great, now you’re a teacher.’”
“It requires intentional building of LLMs to basically be able to tune it to be good at pedagogy to reinforce what we know about learning science and not assume that will happen without some kind of intervention.”
When Michigan State’s president resigned, he blamed trustees and they faulted one another.
As state lawmakers weigh whether to increase funding for the all-online community college for adult learners, Calbrig
Online program management companies—many now in the hands of private equity firms—are attempting to rebound aft
Some low-tech strategies can help us build more resilient systems.
Hear campus tech leaders’ views on 2030 risks, hiring gaps, job satisfaction & AI’s impact thus far.
Don’t miss a single story
Subscribe for unlimited access to news and opinion.
Create a free account and get higher ed’s most essential news, analysis, and career advice delivered to your inbox.
Copyright © 2026 Inside Higher Ed All rights reserved.
Log in to manage your newsletter preferences.
Free Account
Continued access and get the Daily News Update from Inside Higher Ed
Insider Premium Subscription (Annual)
Support Journalism
Benefits designed for higher ed leaders, including:
$119.00
Already registered? .
