Competencies in the AI Era: Critical Thinking
IE TOWER
T.10.01
IE Tower, Paseo de la Castellana 259E
Registration
Details
How can we better engage students in critical thinking about the societal, cultural, ethical, and legal implications of generative AI (GenAI)? This workshop aims to help professors design an in-class activity in which students will be asked to accomplish a task using GenAI tools, then reflect on the potential implications of using these tools. We will begin with an overview of some of the key questions that have been raised about GenAI: its potential impacts on jobs, the environment, labor relations, intellectual property rights, cultural production, and the nature of how we understand “reality,” among others. Following this overview, the workshop facilitator will share an example of an activity designed for Communication students that led to a productive in-class discussion of GenAI’s implications for that field. Finally, workshop participants will work on designing a similar activity for a course they teach and share their ideas. Participants will leave the workshop with a view on how to approach Critical Thinking competencies in their teaching and a plan for an engaging activity that prompts students to reflect on and discuss the broader consequences of GenAI for their chosen field of study.
Speakers
Vincent Doyle
Vincent Doyle has long been fascinated by the relationships among media, society, culture, politics, social movements, and public discourse. He began his university studies in political science at the University of Ottawa, where he was born, but soon gravitated towards communication, media, and cultural studies because of his interdisciplinary interests. “I study communication and media,” he says, “because it helps me to understand how we are all products of history, language, and the institutions that shape our lives, even if we are not always aware of it.” With knowledge and understanding, Prof. Doyle believes, comes the capacity to make better decisions, along with the opportunity to develop a sense of belonging and accountability to an intellectual community that nourishes our human desire to improve our lives and the world around us.
Prof. Doyle is a Fellow of the Sexuality Research Fellowship Program of the U.S. Social Science Research Council (SSRC, 2000-2001) and the recipient of two top paper awards from the International Communication Association (ICA) and a member of the editorial board of the ICA journal, Communication, Culture & Critique (2017- ).