World's first AI university president says tech will disrupt education tenets, create 'renaissance scholars'

FOX News 

President of MBZUAI Eric Xing said current metrics to grade student's intelligence will be very quickly disrupted by artificial intelligence. The president of the world's first artificial intelligence (AI) university said the educational system's current quantifiers of "intelligence" will face disruption from the new technology, allowing students to focus on solving problems rather than simply recalling information. Eric Xing, the president of Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence (MBZUAI) in Abu Dhabi, said many of the ways the current education system qualifies student intelligence are questionable, wherein it is not necessarily focusing on solving problems but rather how much knowledge one can remember. He said that because AI technologies bring about vast amounts of highly accessible knowledge easily gleaned from a textbook, current "intelligence" metrics, such as the medical or legal bar examinations, will be quickly disrupted. EXPERTS SAY AI COULD RADICALLY CHANGE'BROKEN' US EDUCATION SYSTEM FOR THE BETTER: 'READY TO BE DISRUPTED' Prior to his appointment as President of MBZUAI in Abu Dhabi, Eric Xing was a professor in the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University.

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