Co-Learning AI
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Professors and students navigate an emerging field together
In the summer of 2020, international studies professor David Moore found himself preparing for a semester unlike any he had taught before. In response, he sketched out an entirely new class, Global Contagions, Past and Present, one that would help students make sense of both the historical forces and the lived realities of disease. Recently, Moore has been feeling a similar unease about the spread of a new global phenomenon, artificial intelligence. Once again, he endeavored to hash out these ideas in a class he is teaching this semester, Thinking Internationally About (and With) AI and ChatGPT. To assist in the creation of the class, he tapped Ellie Spangler ’26 to co-write the syllabus and precept. The syllabus explores AI and labor, modern media, academia, and the environmental impacts of data centers. The course grounds contemporary debates in a long history of technological imagination. Students watch Terminator 2 and read the 1920 Czech play Rossum’s Universal Robots, which introduced the word “robot” to the world. For Moore, one of the most compelling aspects of the course has been watching students collectively build their understanding of AI in real time. With no established canon of scholarship on the subject, and few authoritative academic voices to lean on, the traditional model of a seasoned professor imparting expertise simply doesn’t apply. Instead, the class learns alongside one another, exploring an emerging field as it takes shape. They’ve even coined ...