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Administrative AI Governance and Implementation Controls in US Higher Education Institutions

Voorvertoning document

Dit is een beknopte voorvertoning. De volledige versie bevat uitgebreide tekst voor alle secties, een conclusie en een geformatteerde bibliografie.

Project

DegreeType
Administrative AI Governance and Implementation Controls in US Higher Education Institutions

Auteur:

Group

Voornaam Achternaam

Begeleider:

Dr. Voornaam Achternaam

Stad, 2026

Inhoudsopgave

Abstract
Introduction
Project Description and Governance Context
Defining the Institutional AI Landscape
Ethical and Strategic Leadership Objectives
Implementation and Governance Controls
Developing Auditable AI Protocols
Data Privacy and Minimization Routines
Analysis
Assessing Operational Efficiency and Risk Mitigation
Recommendations and Rollout Priorities
Sustainable Infrastructure Investment
Chapter 1. Project Description and Governance Context
Chapter 2. Implementation and Governance Controls
Analysis
Chapter 4. Practical Recommendations and Rollout Priorities
Conclusion
Bibliography

Inleiding

The rapid integration of automated systems within American postsecondary institutions marks a shift from experimental pedagogical tools to foundational administrative infrastructure. While much public discourse centers on generative models in the classroom, the silent migration of machine learning into admissions, financial aid, and student retention modeling presents a more profound challenge to traditional collegiate management. These systems promise unprecedented operational efficiency by processing vast datasets to predict student success or optimize resource allocation. However, the adoption of such technologies often outpaces the development of oversight mechanisms, leaving universities vulnerable to algorithmic bias and data privacy breaches. The urgency for structured intervention stems from the fact that administrative decisions carry significant weight regarding equity and access, yet the logic behind these automated choices remains frequently opaque to both staff and students. When a predictive model determines a student’s financial eligibility or likelihood of graduation, the lack of a clear audit trail transforms a technical process into a matter of institutional justice. The central tension facing university leadership involves balancing the drive for technological modernization with the mandate for institutional accountability. This dual-use dilemma manifests when tools intended to streamline workflows inadvertently codify historical inequities or compromise the fiduciary responsibilities of the institution. Evidence suggests that many US colleges operate without a centralized policy for procurement or deployment, resulting in a fragmented landscape where individual departments implement black-box solutions without rigorous vetting. Such "shadow AI" practices create silos of unmanaged risk, where data might be shared with third-party vendors without adequate protection or ethical review. Without auditable implementation controls, the risk of reputational damage and legal liability increases, particularly as federal and state regulations regarding algorithmic transparency begin to tighten. Addressing this gap requires more than just technical fixes; it demands a reconfiguration of how institutions define and enforce digital agency across their entire organizational chart. This research seeks to bridge the chasm between technological capability and ethical oversight by designing an operational governance framework tailored specifically for the administrative functions of US higher education. Achieving this objective necessitates a multi-stage inquiry that begins with the systematic identification of core institutional risks, ranging from data security vulnerabilities to the erosion of professional autonomy among university staff. Following this risk assessment, the project develops a set of auditable governance controls designed to embed transparency into the lifecycle of system deployment. These controls serve as the backbone for a series of performance and compliance metrics, allowing administrators to quantify the impact of automated systems on institutional goals rather than relying on anecdotal evidence of success. Finally, the framework culminates in a scalable rollout strategy intended to facilitate university-wide integration while maintaining the flexibility to adapt to diverse departmental needs, from the registrar's office to the development department. Validating this framework involves a mixed-methods approach that synthesizes policy analysis with stakeholder interviews to ensure the proposed controls are both theoretically sound and practically viable. By moving beyond abstract ethical principles and toward concrete, measurable standards, this study provides a roadmap for institutions to reclaim agency over their technological ecosystems. The significance of this work lies in its potential to transform automation from a disruptive external force into a governed internal asset that aligns with the specific cultural and legal context of the American university system. Establishing such a precedent ensures that the pursuit of efficiency does not come at the expense of the core values—fairness, transparency, and service—that define the academic mission. As institutions navigate a future defined by increased reliance on complex algorithms, the presence of a robust governance structure will distinguish those that merely adopt technology from those that master it responsibly. This project contributes to a growing body of knowledge that treats technology not as a neutral tool, but as a site of active institutional management and ethical deliberation.

Literatuurlijst

  1. Artificial Intelligence Policies for Higher Education: Manifesto for Critical Considerations and a Roadmap (2025)
    Christian M. Stracke, Nurun Nahar, Veronica Punzo et al.
    Open source
  2. Postsecondary Administrative Leadership and Educational AI (2022)
    Benjamin S. Selznick, Tatjana N. Titareva
    DOI-link
  3. Administrative Theater in Higher Education: Invisible Leadership, AI Governance, and Ethical Visibility (2026)
    Viktor Wang
    Open source
  4. EU Data Governance, AI Ethics, and Responsible Digitalisation in Higher Education: A Compliance–Capability Framework for Universities (2025)
    Igor Britchenko, Inga Lysiak
  5. Implementing educational technology in Higher Education Institutions: A review of technologies, stakeholder perceptions, frameworks and metrics (2023)
    Ritesh Chugh, Darren Turnbull, Michael A. Cowling et al.
  6. Systematic review of research on artificial intelligence applications in higher education – where are the educators? (2019)
    Olaf Zawacki‐Richter, Victoria I. Marín, Melissa Bond et al.
  7. National policy analysis of digital transformation in Vietnamese higher education: Conceptualising a three-layer model for implementation (2025)
    Huong Lan Nguyen, Yvonne Hong
  8. Graduate Student Engagement and Digital Governance in Higher Education (2025)
    M. Doğan, Hasan Arslan
  9. AI as asset and liability: A dual-use dilemma in higher education and the SPARKE Framework for institutional AI governance (2025)
    Olumide Malomo, A. Adekoya, Aurelia M. Donald et al.
  10. Handbook of Artificial Intelligence in Higher Education (2025)
    Popenici, Stefan

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