The AI Implementation Gap in Higher Education: Navigating the Disconnect Between Technology Adoption, Policy Awareness, and Institutional Governance

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Abstract

Artificial intelligence (AI) has rapidly permeated higher education workplaces, yet a significant disconnect exists between employee adoption of AI tools and institutional policy awareness, governance structures, and strategic clarity. This study examines the emergent phenomenon of the "AI implementation gap" in higher education—the disparity between widespread AI tool usage and the institutional frameworks meant to guide such use. Drawing on recent survey data from nearly 2,000 higher education professionals and situating findings within broader theoretical frameworks of technology adoption, organizational change, and higher education governance, this article critically analyzes the current state of AI integration in higher education work environments. Key findings reveal that while 94% of higher education employees report using AI tools for work, only 54% are aware of relevant institutional policies, and more than half have used AI tools not sanctioned by their institutions. The analysis explores the risks, opportunities, and challenges associated with this implementation gap, including concerns about data privacy, misinformation, skill erosion, algorithmic bias, environmental impact, and the largely unmeasured return on investment of AI initiatives. The article also examines the roles of AI vendors, the ethical dimensions of AI adoption, and the implications of voluntary versus mandated technology use. The article concludes with recommendations for institutional leaders, policymakers, and researchers seeking to bridge the gap between AI adoption and governance in higher education contexts.

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