HigherEd AI Daily
April 11, 2026
Saturday's best story is the one that most directly affects how you, as a non-engineer professor, interact with AI tools going forward.
Dr. Ali Green
Quick Links
- The Neuron (April 10 Issue)
- TLDR AI (April 10 Issue)
- The Batch by Andrew Ng (April 10)
- Google NotebookLM
Non-Technical Faculty Can Now Build Functional AI Apps Without Asking IT for Help
The Neuron reported this week that tools like Claude Cowork, Notion AI agents, and Replit's natural language app builder have crossed a usability threshold where non-technical users can build working AI-powered applications. Faculty are now deploying tools that auto-summarize student feedback, generate personalized reading lists, and monitor journal databases without writing any code. The key shift is that these tools accept plain English instructions rather than requiring programming knowledge.
Why this matters for your teaching
If you have had an idea for an AI-powered workflow but assumed you would need a developer to build it, that assumption is now outdated. You can prototype most academic productivity tools in an afternoon using the platforms available today.
Read more: The Neuron (April 10 Issue)
Pulled from: The Neuron
OpenAI Launches a $100 Per Month Plan Positioned Between ChatGPT Plus and Pro
OpenAI introduced a mid-tier subscription plan this week priced at $100 per month. It sits between the $20 Plus plan and the $200 Pro plan and is aimed at power users who need higher usage limits but do not need the full computational allocation of the Pro tier. TLDR AI reported that the new plan includes expanded access to o1 and GPT-4.1 and higher rate limits for API-adjacent workflows.
Why this matters for your teaching
For faculty who have been bumping up against usage limits on the $20 plan but find the $200 Pro plan hard to justify for personal academic use, this mid-tier option may be worth evaluating, especially if your research involves heavy document processing or long multi-turn research conversations.
Read more: TLDR AI (April 10 Issue)
Pulled from: TLDR AI
Andrew Ng Says the CS Curriculum Needs to Rethink What Junior Developers Actually Do
In his April 10 letter, Andrew Ng argued that as AI coding agents accelerate development timelines, the most important shift in software education is not teaching less coding but rethinking what decisions require human judgment. He identified open questions including what skills will define a senior engineer when AI writes most code, how CS teams should be restructured, and how the new curriculum for junior roles should be designed. He described this shift as the Product Management Bottleneck.
Why this matters for your teaching
For faculty in computer science, data science, and any field that includes programming instruction, Ng's framework is worth reading and discussing with colleagues. The curriculum question is not hypothetical. It is arriving this academic year.
Read more: The Batch by Andrew Ng (April 10 Issue)
Pulled from: The Batch by Andrew Ng
Try something new today
Prompt of the Day
"I am a professor with no coding background who wants to build a simple AI-powered tool that monitors newly published research in my field and sends me a weekly summary. I use Claude and Google Workspace. Walk me through exactly how I would set this up using tools available today, naming specific products and explaining each step in plain language. Assume I have never built an AI workflow before."
Tool of the Day
Upload research papers and let NotebookLM generate summaries, FAQs, and audio briefings. A no-code starting point for building your own research monitoring workflow.
Free
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Dr. Ali Green
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