A freshman is working on a quick film about her grandmother somewhere on the outskirts of the San Diego State campus. It is a component of the Life Tree project, a first-year assignment that, on paper, sounds like the kind of thing universities have always done: students reflecting, sharing, and learning how to introduce themselves. The toolkit is different. By the end of the semester, she will have a digital artifact that she can present to an employer, and she is working in Adobe Express rather than a notebook. That tiny change, which is repeated annually by 4,000 students on that one campus alone, is the kind of detail that indicates a change is occurring.
The Adobe Creative Campus Innovator program doesn’t make a big deal out of itself. There’s no glossy advertising campaign or commencement-stage rollout. However, administrators at nine universities—as well as a few more recent additions like the University of Arizona, Aston University in Birmingham, San José State, and Western Sydney—are discreetly reconstructing what an undergraduate education truly offers. Years from now, this might appear to be the point at which American higher education ceased to pretend that the 2008 syllabus was still effective.
The list is notable for how unglamorous the majority of the schools are. Not the Ivies. Montana State, not the design conservatories. The program’s first recognized HBCU is Winston-Salem State. Texas University at San Antonio. These are public universities with tight budgets, concerns about student retention, and the particular difficulty of preparing first-generation students for a labor market that is constantly changing beneath them. It seems that the program gained popularity because these schools couldn’t afford to overlook it.
The program at Indiana University targets high-DFW courses, or classes with uncomfortably high drop, fail, and withdrawal rates, which are topics that educators rarely discuss in public. In essence, the Transformative Educator initiative is a redesign project that aims to incorporate innovative tools into gateway courses that have historically excluded students. It’s still unclear if it functions at scale. In two years, the university hopes to reach over 7,000 students. The implications for retention statistics are intriguing, even if it only reaches half of that.

The way Bath Spa University in the UK administers its Adobe Creative Advocates program is almost antiquated. Students participate in Juno House, a campus organization that provides pro bono design services to nearby nonprofits. The arrangement is more akin to the apprenticeship model that once defined craft education than it is to a tech partnership. One of the more bizarre paradoxes of the present is witnessing universities strive back toward that while also incorporating generative AI modules.
All of this is clouded by the AI question. A microcredential centered on what San Diego State refers to as ethical, creative GenAI fluency has been introduced. More than a thousand credentials in generative AI applications, social media design, and podcasting have been awarded by the University of Utah. More than 20,000 students at RMIT in Australia participate in curriculum-integrated projects. The scale begins to resemble a parallel curriculum that runs alongside the official one and gathers data, rather than an experiment.
The more difficult question is whether any of this qualifies as a credential that employers genuinely respect. For the past ten years, hiring managers have responded to digital badges in a courteous but inconsistent manner. The portfolios are tangible, though. A student leaves with completed assignments rather than merely a transcript. That is not insignificant, particularly for graduates from universities lacking the prestige of Stanford or Michigan.
It’s difficult to ignore how infrequently Adobe itself shows up in any of this messaging. There isn’t much branding. At Arizona’s Digital Learning Institute, faculty fellows discuss their own teaching methods rather than the software. Here, a silent wager is being made that the business that succeeds in the next phase of education won’t be the one shouting about change, but rather the one that is already in the lesson plan.⁖※
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