Publications /
Opinion

Back
Why Smart Institutions are Investing in AI, Not Fighting It
Authors
Imad Hajjaji
September 15, 2025

There is something almost predictable about how academic institutions react to disruptive technology. First comes resistance, then fear-mongering, and finally often too late grudging acceptance. This pattern has been repeated countless times throughout history.

Take the 1970s calculator controversy. Mathematics professors were genuinely worried that electronic calculators would somehow "dumb down" their students [1]. The irony? Those same tools ended up freeing mathematicians from tedious arithmetic, allowing them to tackle far more sophisticated problems. We've seen this story before and since. Statistical software like SPSS and R faced similar resistance from statisticians who thought automated analysis would make them obsolete. Digital databases? Academics were convinced they'd destroy scholarly research. Each time, the pattern was the same: early adopters thrived while the holdouts got left behind.

Now the academic world is dealing with artificial intelligence and the arguments around its impact sound remarkably familiar, with the same predictions of doom. Yet the data tells a completely different story.

Consider this reality: 92% of British students are already using AI tools in some capacity [2]. That's not a small pilot program or an experimental initiative that's widespread adoption happening whether institutions like it or not. Meanwhile, generative AI usage in professional settings jumped from 33% to 71% in just one year [3]. These aren't numbers anyone can ignore.

Resarchers who've embraced AI tools including ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity aren't becoming less capable, they're becoming more productive [4]. They're using these platforms for brainstorming, drafting, data analysis, and literature reviews. However, the picture isn't entirely rosy some studies suggest that while AI tools can boost efficiency, they may also lead to reduced job satisfaction due to decreased creativity and skill underutilization among researchers.

In educational settings, AI-powered adaptive learning systems are improving student test scores by 62% [5]. These aren't marginal gains; they're transformational improvements that any serious institution should want to capture.

But here's what's really exciting: the smart institutions aren't just using AI, they're monetizing it. Universities are licensing their research data, their archived publications, and their specialized datasets to AI companies [6].They're turning decades of accumulated knowledge into revenue streams while simultaneously contributing to technological advancement. It's a win-win scenario that the lagging institutions are completely missing out on.

Some people argue for special protections, regulations that would slow AI development to protect traditional academic methods. This approach seems fundamentally misguided. Could anyone have protected slide rules from calculators? Encyclopedia publishers from Wikipedia? Of course not. The market—and more importantly, human progress—moved forward regardless.

The institutions that are thriving today are those that give their researchers freedom to experiment with AI tools[7]. They're not micromanaging the process or creating bureaucratic hurdles. They're simply saying: “Here are the tools—figure out how to use them effectively”.

History has a way of being brutally honest about these transitions. The institutions that adapt early tend to lead their fields for decades. Those that resist often find themselves playing catch-up, scrambling to implement technologies that their competitors have already mastered.

Academic institutions don't need to protect researchers from AI. They need to give them the resources and freedom to harness its potential. Because if there's one certainty, it's that the next breakthrough in any field is more likely to come from someone using AI tools than from someone avoiding them.

The choice is clear: invest in AI integration or watch from the sidelines as others race ahead. Smart institutions have already made their decision.

References

[1] National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. (1980). An Agenda for Action: Recommendations for School Mathematics of the 1980s. NCTM.

[2] Anara. (2025). "AI in Higher Education Statistics: The Complete 2025 Report." https://anara.com/blog/ai-in-education-statistics

[3] McKinsey. (2025). "The State of AI: Global survey." https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/quantumblack/our-insights/the-state-of-ai

[4] Reddit r/PhdProductivity. (2025). "What AI tools (besides ChatGPT) do you actually use in your PhD?" https://www.reddit.com/r/PhdProductivity/comments/1kvepen/what_ai_tools_besides_chatgpt_do_you_actually_use/

[5] ScienceDirect. (2024). "Artificial intelligence in education: A systematic literature review." https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0957417424010339

[6] Microsoft. (2025). "AI-powered success—with more than 1,000 stories of customer transformation and innovation." https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-cloud/blog/2025/07/24/ai-powered-success-with-1000-stories-of-customer-transformation-and-innovation/

[7] McKinsey. (2025). "The next innovation revolution—powered by AI." https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/quantumblack/our-insights/the-next-innovation-revolution-powered-by-

RELATED CONTENT

  • September 24, 2020
    Profondément préoccupée par les niveaux alarmants de propagation et de sévérité du Coronavirus, l’Organisation mondiale de la Santé (OMS) annonce, le 11 mars 2020, que la Covid-19 a atteint le niveau de pandémie. Pour contenir la propagation du virus, la vie sociale et économique est pratiquement paralysée : Selon l’Agence internationale de l’Energie (AIE), environ un tiers de la population mondiale a fait l'objet de confinement complet ou partiel entre février et la mi-mai, et ...
  • Authors
    Sabine Cessou
    September 22, 2020
    « Passionate, Black, visionary » Ana Paula Barreto talks about serious matters with great calm, taking time to reflect before answering questions, from New York. Born in Jardim Angela, a poor area of São Paulo, considered as the most dangerous neighbourhood in the world by the United Nations in 1996, she remembers the violence of the favelas. She doesn’t want to reduce her childhood « in a joyful family » to « the ugly », but one of her strongest ...
  • September 15, 2020
    Reputation, a key concept, if any, is an indicator of the esteem granted to a natural person but also to a company or a state entity. Consisting of a sum of perceptions, it is the overall outcome of a set of images, appreciations of actions and behaviors. Thus, the good reputation of a government is determined and measured by its ability to cope with the hardships that the country is going through, to face the upheavals that shake it and to manage the end of crises. At the level of ...
  • Authors
    Salma Daoudi
    September 14, 2020
    As the Covid-19 pandemic continues to rage and fuel much political and economic turmoil, a new scourge is crashing down on the world: Vaccine nationalism. Witnessing the fragmentation of global public health and the erosion of multilateralism in the midst of health chaos, vaccine nationalism – a race for priority rights to monopolize limitedproduction doses – is threatening to politicize access to vaccines. In addition to ethical concerns, this nationalist approach feeds health and ...
  • Authors
    September 11, 2020
    Latin American and Caribbean economies need help, but organizations like the IDB are also stretched thin. First appeared at Americas Quarterly With Latin America and the Caribbean potentially facing years of difficulties due to the pandemic and related economic crises, attention has shifted to what multilateral institutions like the International Monetary Fund (IMF) might do to help. There’s no doubt they can play a crucial role in preventing another lost decade in the region. But ...
  • Authors
    Salma Daoudi
    September 3, 2020
    Alors que la pandémie de la Covid-19 continue de sévir et d’alimenter nombre de turbulences politiques et économiques, un nouveau fléau s’abat sur le monde : Le nationalisme vaccinal. Témoin de la fragmentation de la santé publique mondiale et de l’effritement du multilatéralisme face au chaos sanitaire, le nationalisme vaccinal, soit la course aux droits prioritaires pour l’accaparement de doses à la production limitée, menace de politiser l’accès au vaccin. Outre les préoccupation ...
  • Authors
    Sous la direction de
    September 3, 2020
    Au moment où elle fêtait le passage à 2020, l’Afrique était loin de soupçonner que l’année à laquelle elle faisait ses adieux, aurait le funeste “privilège” de porter dans ses registres d’Etat-civil, la naissance d’un virus qui allait paralyser le monde, dans la première moitié de l’année suivante. C’est sur cette Afrique de l’année pré-Covid-19 que portent les différents papiers du présent Rapport. Les uns, reflétant les espoirs, les ambitions et les projets africains et, les autre ...
  • Authors
    Taoufik Marrakchi
    September 2, 2020
    The crisis of the new Coronavirus is exacerbating the tensions between the United States and China, thus foreshadowing a war without guns, in which the stakes are neither territorial nor ideological, but economic. Having adopted a vehement attitude towards China, well before this crisis, the tenant of the White House has brandished the threat of economic sanctions against China and is pushing towards its isolation on the international scene in order to contain its influence. In cont ...
  • September 1, 2020
    بعد تفشي فيروس كورونا المستجد في جل مناطق العالم، اختلفت طرق التصدي له من دولة إلى أخرى. حيث اعتمدت الدول قرارات متفاوتة من حيث الصرامة في ظل الحد من تفشي هذا الوباء. وفي نفس الصدد، اتُخذت عدة قرارات لدعم المواطنين لكي يتاح لهم المرور من هذه الأزمة بأقل الأضرار الممكنة في مختلف القطاعات...