As artificial intelligence (AI) becomes increasingly integrated into higher education, instructors and institutions face urgent questions about its implications for teaching, learning, and scholarly practice as well as power, agency, and access. This study draws on a critical AI media literacy framework to analyze user-generated discussions in the two largest higher education subreddits on Reddit.com. Through thematic content analysis, I explore faculty perceptions, pedagogical tensions, and imaginative possibilities surrounding AI’s academic role in shaping the current and future landscape of higher education. Findings reveal that discussions of student cheating, AI policies, writing practices, and faculty labor are not merely technical debates but sites where surveillance regimes, accountability structures, and academic precarity are negotiated in real time. Ultimately, I argue that AI in higher education is not simply a technological shift but a structural transformation requiring deliberate, critically informed governance grounded in equity and human agency.
Olivia G. Stewart (Mon,) studied this question.