Abstract

As generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) continues to disrupt the way higher education is delivered, universities are responding at pace with strategies and resources to ensure responsible and ethical use of the technology by our students as they prepare for future professions. The integration of GenAI into teaching and learning activities is being diffused into educators’ practice on a spectrum from caution through to positive educational transformation. In this paper, a team of educational designers in an Arts Faculty shares case studies and reflections from our educator colleagues to explore the uneven uptake of the technology. We argue that the focus on assessment security is blurring the potential of GenAI to create collaborative, exploratory and expansive learning experiences for our students. We suggest a programmatic approach to ‘becoming’ a graduate will allow space for educators to interrogate their teaching, learning and assessment activities to ensure our graduates can imagine themselves as professional selves in an uncertain future.

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