(Re)framing the GenAI system shock: polycrisis, metacrisis, unicrisis?

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  • čas přidán 13. 09. 2024
  • UTS TD Convo 21st Aug. 2024: events.humanit...
    TD Convos August 2024
    Join us for our August Transdisciplinary Research Conversation (TD Convo) as Prof. Simon Buckingham Shum, Director of the Connected Intelligence Centre, UTS explores the GenAI system shock in education. The session will be chaired by Dr. Antonette Shibani, TD School.
    TD Convos reimagines the traditional approach to academic seminars. We open our doors to our community so that we can have collective conversations, cross boundaries, and make connections. Register early to attend this interactive on-campus event, as space is limited for face-to-face participants (Registration not required for TD School staff). Online registrants will receive a Zoom link prior to the session.
    (Re)framing the GenAI system shock: polycrisis, metacrisis, unicrisis?
    Abstract: GenAI is scoring high on the university Richter scale, with aftershocks accompanying each release. We’re witnessing the largest rollout of AI in educational history, triggered by unprecedented tech investment, extraordinary engineering advances and saturation coverage. Many hopes and fears filled the vacuum of evidence last year, which is an obvious invitation to researchers, some of which is underway here at UTS. However, amidst the urgency for fast tactical responses, we must understand AI in a larger frame. Many sober-minded people concur that humanity now finds itself at an inflection point. The disruptions to interlocking systems (ecological; political; financial; technological; medical; educational...) feel overwhelming. If we frame the challenge as grappling with this polycrisis (or is that permacrisis?), an implication is that we must equip graduates to engage with the extreme complexity of these dilemmas, harnessing AI to augment our collective intelligence. But if in fact this is also a metacrisis, this reframes our predicament more disturbingly. Do we now find ourselves in “a time between worlds” (Zak Stein)? Should we now be “hospicing modernity” (Vanessa De Oliveira)? Does neuroscience now reveal why we’re struggling to atttend relationally and holistically (Iain McGilchrist)? So, asking what we do about GenAI really leads us to deeper questions: What is the purpose of a university education? Dig deeper, and you end up asking: What does it mean to be fully human? - a question often provoked by advances in AI. (We may not resolve all of these in one session!)
    Comment: I welcome this chance to share thoughts-in-progress and hear where you’re at on this. Transdisciplinary ways of thinking and working offer hope, so looking forward to finding some new soul mates!
    Simon Buckingham Shum is Professor of Learning Informatics at the University of Technology Sydney, which he joined in 2014 as inaugural Director of the Connected Intelligence Centre. CIC is a transdisciplinary innovation centre inventing, piloting, evaluating and scaling data-driven personalised feedback to students, using human-centred design principles. Simon currently leads the GenAI.edu project in the UTS Education Portfolio, supporting R&D into conversational agents for teaching and learning. Prior to this he was a founding member of the UK Open University’s Knowledge Media Institute (1995-2014), working on strategic initiatives linked to major educational technology transitions, including OpenLearn (OER movement), SocialLearn (Web 2.0) and FutureLearn (MOOCs). Simon’s career-long fascination with software’s ability to make thinking visible has seen him active academically in fields including Hypertext, Design Rationale, Open Scholarly Publishing, Computational Argumentation, Computer-Supported Cooperative Work, Educational Technology and Learning Analytics/AI in education. Simon’s background in Psychology (B.Sc.), Ergonomics (M.Sc.) and Human-Computer Interaction (Ph.D.) always draws his attention to the myriad human factors that determine the effective adoption of new tools for thought, and the kinds of futures they might create at scale.
    TD School
    The TD School is the UTS home of transdisciplinary education and research. Study with us to learn across, between and beyond our disciplines - to enrich your possibilities and make an impact.
    The TD School’s uniquely collaborative approach to research combines academic knowledge from multiple disciplines with applied knowledge from industry.
    TD research is ideally suited to problem spaces that are open, complex, dynamic and networked. It goes beyond solving discrete problems by opening doors to new questions and digs deeper at root causes instead of targeting symptoms.

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