Abstract

Learning about artificial intelligence (AI) has become one of the most discussed topics in the field of education. However, it has become an equally important learning approach in contemporary education to propose a “general education” agenda that conveys instructional messages about AI basics and ethics, especially for those students without an engineering background. The current study proposes a situated learning design for education on this topic. Through a three-week lesson session and accompanying learning activities, the participants undertook hands-on tasks relating to AI. They were also afforded the opportunity to learn about the current attributes of AI and how these may apply to understanding AI-related ethical issues or problems in daily life. A pre- and post-test design was used to compare the learning effects with respect to different aspects of AI (e.g., AI understanding, cross-domain teamwork, AI attitudes, and AI ethics) among the participants. The study found a positive correlation among all the factors, as well as a strong link between AI understanding and attitudes on the one hand and AI ethics on the other. The implications of these findings are discussed, and suggestions are made for possible future revisions to current instructional design and for future research.

Highlights

  • Published: 26 March 2021Learning about artificial intelligence (AI) has become one of the most discussed topics in the field of education [1,2]

  • To ascertain the levels of AI understanding among learners following their participation in the designed AI course, a repeated T-test analysis was applied in this study

  • This study proposes a set of situated-learning-based course modules in the form of lectures, case discussions, and hands-on activities for students with non-engineering backgrounds to learn about AI

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Summary

Introduction

Published: 26 March 2021Learning about artificial intelligence (AI) has become one of the most discussed topics in the field of education [1,2]. For students without a computer engineering background (i.e., non-engineering students), it is crucial to learn about basic AI concepts in order for them to be able to picture a future AI-enriched world and the potential of AI applications. For such students, how AI necessitates cross-domain collaboration by experts with different backgrounds could be essential to understanding the development of AI. Regarding of the students were male and 220 learning lessons, which lasted three weeks in the middle of the course, were in three parts. The instructor provided authentic learning activities, as illustrated in Table

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