The proliferation of AI in many aspects of human life—from personal leisure, to collaborative professional work, to global policy decisions—poses a sharp question about how to prepare people for an interconnected, fast-changing world which is increasingly becoming saturated with technological devices and agentic machines. What kinds of capabilities do people need in a world infused with AI? How can we conceptualise these capabilities? How can we help learners develop them? How can we empirically study and assess their development? With this paper, we open the discussion by adopting a dialogical knowledge-making approach. Our team of 11 co-authors participated in an orchestrated written discussion. Engaging in a semi-independent and semi-joint written polylogue, we assembled a pool of ideas of what these capabilities are and how learners could be helped to develop them. Simultaneously, we discussed conceptual and methodological ideas that would enable us to test and refine our hypothetical views. In synthesising these ideas, we propose that there is a need to move beyond AI-centred views of capabilities and consider the ecology of technology, cognition, social interaction, and values.
%0 Journal Article
%1 MARKAUSKAITE2022100056
%A Markauskaite, Lina
%A Marrone, Rebecca
%A Poquet, Oleksandra
%A Knight, Simon
%A Martinez-Maldonado, Roberto
%A Howard, Sarah
%A Tondeur, Jo
%A De Laat, Maarten
%A Buckingham Shum, Simon
%A Gašević, Dragan
%A Siemens, George
%D 2022
%J Computers and Education: Artificial Intelligence
%K artificialintelligence ecologicalapproach education human-centred learninganalytics postdigitaldialogue
%P 100056
%R https://doi.org/10.1016/j.caeai.2022.100056
%T Rethinking the entwinement between artificial intelligence and human learning: What capabilities do learners need for a world with AI?
%U https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666920X2200011X
%V 3
%X The proliferation of AI in many aspects of human life—from personal leisure, to collaborative professional work, to global policy decisions—poses a sharp question about how to prepare people for an interconnected, fast-changing world which is increasingly becoming saturated with technological devices and agentic machines. What kinds of capabilities do people need in a world infused with AI? How can we conceptualise these capabilities? How can we help learners develop them? How can we empirically study and assess their development? With this paper, we open the discussion by adopting a dialogical knowledge-making approach. Our team of 11 co-authors participated in an orchestrated written discussion. Engaging in a semi-independent and semi-joint written polylogue, we assembled a pool of ideas of what these capabilities are and how learners could be helped to develop them. Simultaneously, we discussed conceptual and methodological ideas that would enable us to test and refine our hypothetical views. In synthesising these ideas, we propose that there is a need to move beyond AI-centred views of capabilities and consider the ecology of technology, cognition, social interaction, and values.
@article{MARKAUSKAITE2022100056,
abstract = {The proliferation of AI in many aspects of human life—from personal leisure, to collaborative professional work, to global policy decisions—poses a sharp question about how to prepare people for an interconnected, fast-changing world which is increasingly becoming saturated with technological devices and agentic machines. What kinds of capabilities do people need in a world infused with AI? How can we conceptualise these capabilities? How can we help learners develop them? How can we empirically study and assess their development? With this paper, we open the discussion by adopting a dialogical knowledge-making approach. Our team of 11 co-authors participated in an orchestrated written discussion. Engaging in a semi-independent and semi-joint written polylogue, we assembled a pool of ideas of what these capabilities are and how learners could be helped to develop them. Simultaneously, we discussed conceptual and methodological ideas that would enable us to test and refine our hypothetical views. In synthesising these ideas, we propose that there is a need to move beyond AI-centred views of capabilities and consider the ecology of technology, cognition, social interaction, and values.},
added-at = {2022-03-26T12:27:01.000+0100},
author = {Markauskaite, Lina and Marrone, Rebecca and Poquet, Oleksandra and Knight, Simon and Martinez-Maldonado, Roberto and Howard, Sarah and Tondeur, Jo and {De Laat}, Maarten and {Buckingham Shum}, Simon and Gašević, Dragan and Siemens, George},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2d9925f22ca711848a6cc298e7ce18512/ereidt},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.caeai.2022.100056},
interhash = {345526bead67da16797905d430f39191},
intrahash = {d9925f22ca711848a6cc298e7ce18512},
issn = {2666-920X},
journal = {Computers and Education: Artificial Intelligence},
keywords = {artificialintelligence ecologicalapproach education human-centred learninganalytics postdigitaldialogue},
pages = 100056,
timestamp = {2022-03-26T12:27:01.000+0100},
title = {Rethinking the entwinement between artificial intelligence and human learning: What capabilities do learners need for a world with AI?},
url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666920X2200011X},
volume = 3,
year = 2022
}