Tennessee
UT helping rural Tennessee overcome tech knowledge gap | Opinion
The future of artificial intelligence at the University of Tennessee
Ozlem Kilic, the dean of the College of Emerging and Collaborative Studies at the University of Tennessee, speaks about the future of artificial intelligence coursework at the Knoxville campus.
Emerging technology is no longer “the tech sector.” Computing, automation, big data and artificial intelligence are becoming the invisible layer in every sector, from manufacturing and logistics to health care, agriculture, and government. A revolution with unstoppable momentum is happening. Is every Tennessean positioned to benefit when it does?
With wages rising from $63,752 to $66,580 in 2024, November 2025 unemployment at 3.6% and nonfarm employment up 34,800 jobs over the year, Tennessee’s economy looks strong. Yet a healthy economy can hide a readiness gap, especially in rural communities, where opportunity can be one broadband outage away.
Workers will need to master digital skills and tools
Where will the work be? Tennessee’s largest sectors will still look familiar, but the work inside them is changing. Computing occupations are projected to grow about 2.5% annually through 2032, and AI, data, cybersecurity, and automation will reshape tasks across the rest. That’s why the priority isn’t only producing more software developers; it’s ensuring every Tennessean can work, learn, and build with digital tools. The future of work is digital even when the job title is not.
That reality collides with two barriers: education and connectivity. Tennessee’s share of adults with some college or higher (58.22%) trails the national level (about 64.6%). And while only 2% of urban residents lack broadband coverage at minimum standards, 34% of rural residents do.
Rural connectivity gap hampers entrepreneurship
And because about 88.5% of Tennessee employers are small businesses (one to 19 employees), Tennessee is already a state of entrepreneurs. The next wave of technology puts powerful tools in everyone’s hands. It will reward the curious, people who dream big, tinker, and turn ideas into something real. But when rural communities lack reliable broadband and tech literacy, the digital gap becomes an entrepreneurship gap that can erase this advantage.
These gaps show up early in the college pipeline. THEC reports Tennessee’s seamless college-going rate for the class of 2024 was 56.0%, and economically disadvantaged students enrolled at 38.7% versus 64.9% for their peers. When a student has to drive for reliable internet to complete FAFSA or apply to TCAT, college access becomes a transportation and technology problem, not just an academic one.
Tennessee has great momentum, but not yet inclusive infrastructure for opportunity so that every Tennessean can dream big, learn fast, and build.
University of Tennessee plays special role in tech literacy
Our response in education can’t be a single program; it has to be a redesign of seamless connectivity: stackable, flexible pathways with multiple entry and exit points. If K-12, TCATs, community colleges, and universities align credentials, a short-term certificate can stack into an associate degree, then a bachelor’s, without losing credit or time. Work experience should be integrated in the education journey, too.
The University of Tennessee at Knoxville, as our flagship land-grant, has a special responsibility here. The place-based and statewide UT Extension offices can become front doors for free digital and emerging tech literacy and entrepreneurship support. If curiosity is our power, then access to knowledge and the chance to tinker with it must be our public utility to position Tennessee for success.
Ozlem Kilic is Vice Provost and founding dean of the College of Emerging and Collaborative Studies at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. She is an expert in emerging technology and higher education innovation.
Tennessee
Tennessee baseball vs Ole Miss score, live updates, start time, Game 3
Tennessee baseball will look to salvage the final game of the SEC series against Ole Miss.
The Vols (25-14, 7-10 SEC) play Game against the No. 23 Rebels (29-11, 10-7) on April 19 (1 p.m. ET, SEC Network+) at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.
Ole Miss has been on a roll. The 8-1 win on April 18 against the Vols moved the Rebels to eight straight wins. It got an ace-level start from Cade Townsend and a grand slam from Tristan Bissetta to secure Game 2.
Taylor Rabe (3-1, 3.16 ERA) will start for the Rebels. Evan Blanco (3-2, 3.67 ERA) will be on the mound for Tennessee.
Tennessee baseball vs. Ole Miss live updates
What channel is Tennessee baseball vs. Ole Miss on today?
- TV channel: SEC Network+
- Live stream: ESPN app
Tennessee baseball vs. Ole Miss game times
- Game 3: April 19 (1 p.m. ET)
Tennessee baseball vs. Ole Miss probable pitchers
- Tennessee: LHP Evan Blanco (3-2, 3.67 ERA)
- Ole Miss: RHP Taylor Rabe (3-1, 3.16 ERA)
Tennessee
Tennessee drops series to Ole Miss with game two loss
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (WVLT) – The Tennessee Volunteers baseball team dropped game two to Ole Miss on Saturday afternoon, 8-1. The Rebels clinch the series, the first time Ole Miss has won a series in Knoxville since 2016.
A bright spot for the Vols was Tegan Kuhns who threw 5.2 innings not allowing a run, striking out 10 batters on five hits.
Cam Appenzeller picked up his first loss of the season coming in out of the bullpen for Kuhns. The SEC Freshman of the Week did not have a great outing. Appenzeller went 2.1 innings giving up six earned runs.
Tennessee escaped a shutout as Trent Grindlinger hit a solo home run in the ninth inning. Grindlinger’s home run was one of Tennessee’s two hits on the night.
The Volunteers look to avoid the series sweep as theY round out the series with Ole Miss on Sunday at Lindsey Nelson Stadium. First pitch is set for 1 p.m. on the SEC Network+.
Copyright 2026 WVLT. All rights reserved.
Tennessee
Tennessee-Ole Miss baseball time change for Game 2
Tennessee (25-13, 7-9 SEC) will continue a three-game home baseball series on Saturday. The Vols will host No. 23 Ole Miss (28-11, 9-7 SEC) at Lindsey Nelson Stadium. Rankings reflect the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll.
Ole Miss won Game 1 on Friday, 7-4.
Saturday’s Game 2 was scheduled for 6 p.m. EDT. Due to possible inclement weather on Saturday, first pitch for Game 2 will take place at 4 p.m. EDT.
“Due to the chance of inclement weather tomorrow night, tomorrow’s game versus Ole Miss will now start at 4 p.m. EDT,” Tennessee announced on Friday.
Below is how to watch information for Saturday’s Tennessee-Ole Miss Game 2.
What channel is Tennessee versus Ole Miss baseball on?
- TV channel: SEC Network+
- Livestream: Watch live on SECN+
- Announcers: Myan Patel (play-by-play) and Cody Hawn (analyst)
Watch Tennessee baseball live
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