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2025 Symposium

Assessment Design in Higher Education: Changing practices for a world with AI

CRADLE’s International Symposium 2025 drew from theory and empirical research to unpack the broad range of contentions emerging about AI and assessment in higher education. As a pivotal highlight of the Symposium program we held an interactive public panel event on Wednesday 17 September.

CRADLE International Symposium 2025 Delegates


Designing university assessment to account for the rise of artificial intelligence (AI) has proved to be difficult and contentious. Across the globe, many academics are making claims that assessment designs and systems need to be completely reconsidered. But the fundamentals of assessment in terms of its purposes may still hold true and many of the problems that are faced in implementing new regimes are challenges that already existed. So what, if anything, has changed? What are the tensions that continue to bedevil us? What conceptual or theoretical framings help us make sense of the things that change and the things that stay the same?

Facilitated by CRADLE’s Professor Phillip Dawson, the panel discussion featured a national and international cast of eminent higher education assessment researchers. The panel reflected on the discussions held throughout the symposium and offered potential directions for future research in the intersections between university assessment and AI.

Our panellists



This panel event was the second session in a three-part webinar series from CRADLE: New Directions in AI Research and Practice. The first session focused on the stories of the students themselves, while the third session discussed how to make assessments secure.


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