As Universities worldwide wrestle with Artificial Intelligence’s growing footprint in academic writing, a Nigerian platform is staking a claim for structure over substitution.
Thesis‑Speedwrite, a research‑management system developed at the University of Abuja, will be formally introduced next month with a message aimed at educators and students alike: AI should buttress scholarship, not supplant it.
The platform’s creators say it channels the technology toward discipline and methodological rigor rather than quick text generation.
The project was led by Professor Isaiah U. Ilo of the University’s Department of Theatre Arts.
Scheduled for a June 4 launch at the university’s Faculty of Law lecture theatre, the platform targets a familiar fault line in higher education — widespread access to information paired with uneven ability to convert that material into defensible academic work.
Unlike general‑purpose large‑language models that respond to open‑ended prompts, Thesis‑Speedwrite is organized around the sequential stages of research.
The system guides users from topic refinement and project planning through literature organization, chapter structuring, drafting and revision.
Its suite includes a Project Planner, Table‑of‑Contents Builder, Master Reference Library, Curated Literature Mapping, Guided Reading Notes and an “Advanced SpeedWrite” drafting environment, according to developers.
“Higher education does not need less rigour because AI exists; it needs better structure,” Professor Ilo said in an interview.
“Thesis‑Speedwrite is built to guide the research process, not to bypass it.”
The timing of the launch comes amid intensified scrutiny over AI’s potential to facilitate poor referencing, superficial argumentation and outright misuse.
The platform’s proponents say their emphasis on planning, reading and revision is intended to strengthen scholarly judgment rather than automate it.
University officials plan a live demonstration of the platform during the June 4 event.
Faculty members, supervisors, students and other stakeholders have been invited to evaluate its workflow, developers said.
NewsQuest reports that if adopted across campuses, the tool could offer a middle path between outright bans on AI and unregulated use — placing institutional emphasis on process and pedagogy rather than policing prose.

