AI mentions on résumés have tripled over the past two years, but colleges aren’t keeping up

As businesses race to become AI-ready, job seekers are racing just as quickly to keep up. New data shows that candidates are getting the message: AI skills are showing up more often on résumés.

But this change is exposing a deeper disconnect: The labor market increasingly rewards AI fluency, while the education system often discourages it.

According to a new report from Monster.com, the number of résumés that mention AI skills has surged in just two years, going from 3.7% in 2023 to 12.8% last year. Per the report, the most notable increase was from 2024 to 2025, when the number of mentions ticked up by 7.6 points. The previous year, it only accelerated by 1.5 points.

The term “artificial intelligence” appeared on 6.3% of résumés last year, up from just 0.5% in 2023. Similarly, the term “machine learning” appeared on 5.7% of résumés, up from 0.6% two years earlier. 

AI mentions on resumes have tripled, but colleges aren’t keeping up | DeviceDaily.com

The surge in AI mentions makes sense. Jobs that require AI tend to pay more. One 2025 report found that jobs that include just one AI skill pay around 28% more, which adds up to another $18,000 in yearly earnings. Jobs that require two AI skills increase yearly salaries by 43%.

In other words, workers are responding rationally to market demand. The faster that people demonstrate AI capability, the better their prospects are for landing a high-paying job. Yet the very institutions responsible for preparing the U.S. workforce are moving in the opposite direction.

On many college campuses, using AI heavily is frowned upon, and college professors are tasked with policing students’ AI usage. According to a recent MarkUp report, some colleges are spending millions on AI detection tools to catch students in the act. Meanwhile, professors don’t feel they are equipped to detect what content has been AI-generated. Per Coursera’s “AI in Higher Education” report, only 28% believe their own university is ready to manage students’ use of AI. 

That’s true even though AI use is also rising among professors themselves, who utilize the technology for developing lesson plans, as well as for instructional purposes in the classroom. According to a survey of more than 1,800 higher-education staff members conducted by the consulting firm Tyton Partners, about 30% of instructors use generative AI daily or weekly. In the spring of 2023, only 2% and 4%, respectively, said the same.

It makes sense that instructors don’t want students using AI to do their coursework. But given how extensively AI is being employed in business, and how much weight it carries when applying for a job, it’s clear that universities are failing to prepare students for a world where AI skills are a major asset.

 


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Sarah Bregel is a writer, editor, and single mom living in Baltimore. She’s contributed to New York MagazineThe Washington Post, Vice, InStyleSlateParents, and others. 


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