Not another AI module
STEP comes after AI literacy: students must show judgment, not just that they know the tools.
Singapore is moving AI competencies into higher education from 2027. STEP helps universities answer what comes after: can students use AI safely, check it, explain it, and deliver work a manager would trust?
For deans, faculty leads, and curriculum teams preparing students for trusted AI-assisted work.
AI courses teach students about tools. STEP tests whether students can use those tools responsibly when the brief is unclear, the AI output is imperfect, and the stakes are real.
STEP comes after AI literacy: students must show judgment, not just that they know the tools.
Students practise the checks and explanations that help managers trust new graduates faster.
The cohort report shows where students earned trust and where judgment broke down, with enough detail for faculty, careers, and boards to act on.
The Four Learns give universities a simple way to place STEP beside existing AI courses without turning it into another content class.
STEP protects the struggle of learning. Students cannot simply accept a polished AI answer. They must check the notes, find weak claims, protect privacy, and explain the judgment behind the final work.
In every mission, AI offers a shortcut that looks good but is not safe. Students must resist the shortcut and earn the right answer.
Understand the manager, the audience, the deadline, and what could go wrong.
Separate verified notes from AI claims, guesses, and missing information.
Decide what AI may help with and what must stay under human judgment.
Send useful work and explain the choices clearly enough for a manager to trust.
One cohort run produces records that career services, faculty, and leadership each use differently.
Readiness records show what the student did, which skills were tested, and where they are ready to speak with confidence.
The cohort view shows where students overtrusted AI, missed important checks, or need more practice before work.
The report gives a practical readiness story, with strengths, gaps, and next steps for faculty review or governance reporting.
Try the sample mission, review the cohort report, then discuss whether STEP fits your graduate readiness goals.