AI Anxiety in Higher Education: How Undergraduate Research Can Help
Artificial intelligence is rapidly transforming how knowledge is created, evaluated, and applied, raising important questions about how higher education prepares students for the future. CUR’s position statement affirms that undergraduate research provides a powerful framework for addressing these challenges, equipping students with critical thinking, ethical reasoning, collaboration, and problem-solving skills that AI cannot replace. Through mentored, inquiry-driven experiences, students learn to evaluate information, navigate uncertainty, use emerging technologies responsibly, and understand how knowledge is generated across disciplines. By strengthening the faculty-student mentorship model and emphasizing engaged learning, undergraduate research will continue to help institutions prepare graduates to thrive in an AI-enabled world.
Authors: Lindsay Currie, Council on Undergraduate Research | Sean Fox, Carleton College | James LaPlant, Valdosta State University
Where Career Readiness + Undergraduate Research IntersectÂ
(Member-Only)
Dive into Understanding the value of undergraduate research as a set of experiences where students build career readiness skills. Explore the powerful framework that connects research experiences to the top competencies employers and graduate schools seek.
Authors: Eric Hall, Elon University | Amanda MacDonald, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University | Jeanne Mekolichick, Radford University | Wil Preston, Towson University
Recognizing Undergraduate Research, Scholarship, & Creative Inquiry as a Career-Readiness Tool
Through the history of CUR, we have better understood the positive implications of undergraduate research for participants. Over the years, the list of benefits has continued to grow. We are now synthesizing these benefits into broader implications they could have for students.
Author: Jeanne Mekolichick, Radford University
Advocacy Talking Points: Undergraduate Research + Career Readiness
Developed by the Career Readiness Resource Development Working Group, this five page advocacy paper explains top talking points on the connections between undergraduate research and career readiness.
Undergraduate Research: A Road Map for Meeting Future National Needs and Competing in a World of Change
In this 2019 CUR position statement, the authors present evidence for the role of undergraduate research in college completion and preparation of a highly skilled workforce, particularly in STEM fields.
Authors: Joanne D. Altman, Tsu-Ming Chiang, Christian S. Hamann, Huda Makhluf, Virginia Peterson, and Sara E. Orel
Recognizing and Valuing the Mentoring of Undergraduate Research, Scholarship, and Creative Activity by Faculty Members: Workload, Tenure, Promotion, and Award Systems
In this 2019 CUR position statement, the authors present the need for recognition of faculty mentorship of undergraduate research, scholarship, and creative activity, recommend best practices for institutions to adopt, offer a selection of case studies that features some of these practices, and summarize upcoming challenges.
Authors: Janet A. Morrison, John F. Barthell, Anne Boettcher, David Bowne, Cheryl Nixon, Karen K. Resendes, and Juliane Strauss-Soukup
For questions or additional information about the position statement, please contact CUR@CUR.org.