STEM, HASS, AI In Istvan Laszlo STEM, HASS, AI In Istvan Laszlo

Generative AI as self-reflection mediator* 

Students use ChatGPT to complete a task and reflect upon it. Stage one sees students prompt the AI to act as a tutor and to quiz them on the weeks topics. Stage two sees the student provide a rubric to the AI for the AI to use to mark and provide feedback. Student then assess themselves and the AI based on the feedback, querying further about anything the AI may be incorrect about, and then submits the entire conversation for low stakes marking.

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STEM, AI Agnostic, AI In Michael Burke STEM, AI Agnostic, AI In Michael Burke

Helping assessments meet learning outcomes while working with AI

Many theoretical units benefit from students programming the concepts taught in class as a learning aid. Translating these abstract theoretical concepts to practical implementations via a coding exercise reinforces understanding, often requiring extended abstract reasoning. However, code generation tools can make these coding task trivial, and removes this opportunity. The examples below make suggestions around ways to work with genAI tools, but still retain the benefits of learning through coding.

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Simulated Interactions, STEM, AI In Thomas Hiscox Simulated Interactions, STEM, AI In Thomas Hiscox

Design simulator

Critical analysis of AI-generated responses and the application of knowledge. Students are tasked with designing a drug that can be used to treat ageing. Students are requested to use generative AI to develop ideas that can be empirically tested. Learning develops as students ‘curate’ AI responses for factual accuracy, efficacy, and practicality.

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Simulated Interactions, STEM, HASS, AI In Joanne Tanner Simulated Interactions, STEM, HASS, AI In Joanne Tanner

Generative AI as an ideation assistant

ChatGPT and other generative AI tools can be used to create highly specified new content quickly making them useful tools for ideation, both for generating alternative ideas and in avoiding some ideation pitfalls (e.g. fixating on the first idea, having a preconceived notion of what a good solution should look like, and being reluctant to share ideas due to anxiety, embarrassment, or having strong ownership of ideas). GenAI can be used for conceptual work, marketing, strategy development, and many other use-cases. We can mirror this use in class, and ask students to start an activity / project with a GenAI and then assess the outputs and narrow down to one or more options to pursue for the project itself.

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