AI amplifies the tough question: What is higher education really for?
- Authors: Kramm, Neil , McKenna, Sioux
- Date: 2023
- Subjects: To be catalogued
- Language: English
- Type: text , article
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/482876 , vital:78697 , https://doi.org/10.1080/13562517.2023.2263839
- Description: The dominant response within higher education to the emergence of free online text- and graphic-generating software has been a concern with identifying AI usage in students’ work. We argue that this is both a waste of time and neglects our educational responsibilities. A police-catch-punish approach to AI, as with the use of this process in relation to plagiarism, ignores the broader purposes of higher education. If higher education is understood as being a space for nurturing transformative relationships with knowledge, AI can be harnessed to enhance learning experiences. Such an approach would also enable a critical understanding of the limitations and ethical deliberations around AI usage. Those critical academics who emphasise transformative learning over surveillance-driven approaches are likely to foster more meaningful higher education experiences.
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- Date Issued: 2023
A wake-up call: Equity, inequality and Covid-19 emergency remote teaching and learning
- Authors: Czerniewicz, Laura , Agherdien, Najma , Badenhorst, Johan , Belluigi, Dina Z , Chambers, Tracey , Chili, Muntuwenkosi , De Villiers, Magriet , Felix, Alan , Gachago, Daniela , Gokhale, Craig , Ivala, Eunice , Kramm, Neil , Madiba, Matete , Mistri, Gitanjali , Mgqwashu, Emmanuel M , Pallitt, Nicola , Prinsloo, Paul , Solomon, Kelly , Strydom, Sonja , Swanepoel, Mike , Waghid, Faiq , Wissing, Gerrit
- Date: 2020
- Subjects: To be catalogued
- Language: English
- Type: text , article
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/439449 , vital:73598 , https://doi.org/10.1007/s42438-020-00187-4
- Description: Produced from experiences at the outset of the intense times when Covid-19 lockdown restrictions began in March 2020, this collaborative paper offers the collective reflections and analysis of a group of teaching and learning and Higher Education (HE) scholars from a diverse 15 of the 26 South African public universities. In the form of a theorised narrative insistent on foregrounding personal voices, it presents a snapshot of the pandemic addressing the following question: what does the ‘pivot online’to Emergency Remote Teaching and Learning (ERTL), forced into urgent existence by the Covid-19 pandemic, mean for equity considerations in teaching and learning in HE? Drawing on the work of Therborn (2009: 20–32; 2012: 579–589; 2013; 2020) the reflections consider the forms of inequality-vital, resource and existential-exposed in higher education. Drawing on the work of Tronto (1993; 2015; White and Tronto 2004) the paper shows the networks of care which were formed as a counter to the systemic failures of the sector at the onset of the pandemic.
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- Date Issued: 2020