How Students Really Feel About AI in Higher Education

As artificial intelligence transforms the landscape of higher education, students are watching — with both curiosity and caution.

WGU Labs surveyed over 4,500 students enrolled at Western Governors University (WGU) to understand how they perceive, use, and experience AI in their learning journey. The findings offer a nuanced look at the hopes, hesitations, and expectations students hold for this rapidly evolving technology.

Key Findings at a Glance

  • Gender Confidence Gap: Women are 12% less confident in their ability to use AI tools than men.
  • Overall Sentiment: 59% of students are optimistic about AI in education, and more than 60% are comfortable with AI using their data for personalized learning.
  • Trust vs. Use: While 58% are open to AI-generated feedback, only 35% trust AI to grade their assignments.
  • Limited Appeal for Emotional Support: Just one-third of students are interested in AI tools for social or emotional guidance.
  • Transparency Matters: An overwhelming 92% of students want to be clearly informed when they are interacting with AI.

What This Means

These insights point to critical priorities for higher education leaders and edtech innovators:

  • Expanding AI Literacy, particularly for underrepresented groups like women
  • Prioritizing Ethical and Transparent Design
  • Centering Student Voices in the development and deployment of AI tools

Explore the full report to uncover what students really want from AI — and what it will take to build trust in the future of learning.

This report was authored by Stephanie Reeves, with valuable contributions from Holly Wallace, Betheny Gross, Natalie Berkey, as well as visual design from CallyAnn Hamilton.

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