Generative artificial intelligence has disrupted traditional assumptions surrounding authorship, academic integrity, and assessment in higher education. However, the growing challenge may not simply be that AI can complete academic tasks. Rather, AI has exposed a deeper educational problem: many traditional assessments were already measuring information reproduction, procedural compliance, and performative completion rather than authentic human learning. This article introduces Experiential Intelligence (ExInt) as a framework for rethinking assessment in AI-mediated learning environments. Experiential Intelligence refers to the human capacity to apply judgment, contextual interpretation, ethical reasoning, reflection, discernment, and lived experience when navigating complex situations. Unlike artificial intelligence systems, which generate outputs through predictive pattern recognition, experiential intelligence develops through consequence, accountability, relational interaction, ambiguity, and human formation. Drawing upon emerging scholarship in authentic assessment and AI-integrated education, this paper argues that the future of assessment requires a shift away from surveillance-centered educational practices and toward models that evaluate distinctly human capacities. The article explores assessment redesign approaches including reflective assessment, oral defense, experiential learning, contextual reasoning, and applied professional judgment. Rather than framing AI solely as a threat to academic integrity, this work positions the current educational moment as an opportunity to reconsider what meaningful learning demonstration should look like in an increasingly automated world. This publication contributes to ongoing interdisciplinary conversations surrounding: Generative AI in higher education Authentic assessment redesign Human-centered learning Ethical reasoning and discernment Experiential learning theory Professional and clinical judgment AI-mediated educational environments
Lydia Elliott (Tue,) studied this question.