New platform enables purposefully designed AI learning guides embedded directly into coursework
Unity Environmental University today announced the launch of ALIGN (Adaptive Learning, Insight & Navigation), a bespoke, in-house, artificial intelligence platform designed to integrate purposefully designed AI learning experiences directly into Unity’s online learning environment.
ALIGN is not a standalone product or generative chatbot. It is the underlying technology Unity uses to design, deploy, and govern structured, student-facing AI learning experiences created by human experts. Through ALIGN, Unity’s learning designers and subject-matter experts build AI guides that support learners in navigating complex academic tasks, without completing work for them or shortcutting the learning process.
“At its core, ALIGN is about using AI where it actually makes sense for learning,” said Dr. Melik Peter Khoury, President and CEO of Unity Environmental University. “We’re not interested in replacing human judgment or expertise. We’re interested in designing systems where human insight can scale responsibly, efficiently, and in service of students.”
ALIGN currently supports assignment-level AI experiences, with additional course-level and student-level capabilities in development. Assignment-level implementations guide learners through challenging components of coursework by responding to the student and prompting them to elaborate on or clarify their thinking and take next steps designed scaffolding and assignment-level rubrics. These experiences emphasize metacognition, formative feedback, and learner agency, helping students understand how they think, not just what they produce.
“One of the biggest risks with AI in learning is that it removes the very struggle students need in order to learn. ALIGN is designed to do the opposite. It reduces unnecessary cognitive load, like confusion about where to start or what matters, so students can focus their mental energy on sense-making, reasoning, and decision-making,” said Dr. Jennifer Cartier, Executive Vice President of Educational Solutions.
Dr. Cartier went on to say that “through Socratic coaching, it preserves the kind of productive thinking that leads to real learning, rather than replacing it with answers.” The first implementation of ALIGN launches in January 2026 through Una Guide, a Socratic, assignment-level AI guide embedded in select courses. Una Guide works alongside students as they complete complex academic tasks, supporting thinking and decision-making rather than generating final outputs. Additional ALIGN-powered experiences launching this term include a persona-based role-play scenario in select Unity courses which allows students to conduct simulated interviews with multiple stakeholder perspectives using the same underlying platform.
Unity developed ALIGN internally after determining that most commercial AI tools in higher education were designed for individual faculty use, lacked institutional oversight, and introduced risks related to privacy, consistency, and academic integrity. By contrast, ALIGN is governed centrally and designed intentionally to reflect what research and experience show about effective teaching and learning..
From a technical perspective, ALIGN emphasizes AI’s predictive and retrieval strengths rather than unrestricted content generation, dramatically reducing hallucinations while also lowering cost and energy use, making ALIGN both scalable and environmentally responsible.
“Sustainability isn’t just about carbon, it’s about responsible design,” said Dr. Khoury. “AI is already effective and efficient when it’s used correctly. ALIGN reflects Unity’s belief that higher education has a responsibility to lead with discipline and clarity, not hype.”
Dr. Khoury has written extensively about the risks of uncritical “AI agent” adoption in higher education and the need for disciplined, system-level design, arguments he expands on in a recent essay published on LinkedIn.
“The future of AI in education isn’t about delegating learning to machines,” Khoury added. “It’s about designing tools that work for students, guided by educators, transparent in how they’re used, and focused on helping people learn more effectively, together.”
