Toward a Theory of Collaborative Intelligence: Educating Future Professionals for Human-AI Workplaces
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.65222/VIRAL.2026.6.39.59Keywords:
Abstract
The accelerating integration of artificial intelligence into professional environments is reshaping organizational structures, work processes, and the competencies required for long-term employability. Future professionals will increasingly operate within socio-technical systems in which intelligent technologies actively participate in decision-making, knowledge creation, and problem-solving activities. This transformation challenges traditional educational paradigms that continue to emphasize disciplinary specialization and technical proficiency while paying comparatively less attention to human-machine collaboration and the distributed nature of intelligence in contemporary organizations. This paper develops a conceptual framework for collaborative intelligence, defined as the capacity of individuals and organizations to effectively coordinate human judgment and artificial intelligence while preserving critical thinking, ethical responsibility, and adaptive learning capabilities. Adopting an interpretivist and systems-oriented perspective, the study synthesizes literature from artificial intelligence in education, organizational learning, future skills research, and socio-technical systems theory to examine how higher education can prepare graduates for increasingly intelligent workplaces. The analysis suggests that collaborative intelligence should be understood not as a purely technological competency but as an emergent capability arising from the interaction between cognitive flexibility, interdisciplinary knowledge, ethical reasoning, and human-centered technological design. The paper argues that universities need to move beyond narrow approaches to digital literacy and instead cultivate capacities that enable graduates to work productively alongside intelligent systems in conditions characterized by uncertainty, complexity, and continuous technological change. The study contributes to current debates by proposing a theoretical model that connects educational transformation with organizational adaptability and provides a foundation for future empirical investigations of human-AI collaboration in professional settings.
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