AI in teaching — make it simple, design it openly
Event content
Focal points
- You will learn about concrete, low-threshold applications of AI in university teaching - without any "prompt knowledge" being assumed.
- They reflect on the didactic added value of AI and discuss productive limitations.
- They develop ideas on how OER can not only be generated efficiently using AI, but also creatively developed further.
Target group
Teachers, those responsible for education and those interested in OER and AI - both beginners and advanced users are welcome.
Topic & procedure
The workshop shows practical and creative applications of artificial intelligence (AI) in university teaching - with a special focus on open educational materials (OER). Specific examples will be used to illustrate how generative tools such as text and image generators not only facilitate the creation of materials, but also open up new didactic perspectives - for example in visualization, structuring learning content or in interactive scenarios.
After a compact input with impulses from teaching practice, various application scenarios are tested in small groups: AI as a sparring partner, visualizer or source of inspiration. The results are incorporated into a joint reflection and transferred to the participants' own teaching contexts.
The focus is on the question of how AI can be used in a didactically meaningful and interdisciplinary way to create open, appealing and high-quality teaching materials. The workshop is aimed at university lecturers and staff from higher education didactic service institutions who would like to gain new impetus for the use of AI in teaching.
The workshop complements the content of our workshop "AI, OER and law - solving practical cases together"which focuses on the legal aspects of using artificial intelligence in teaching. Both formats can be attended independently of each other, but in combination they offer a holistic insight into the didactic and legal dimensions of AI and OER. An overview of further workshop dates can be found here.
Speakers
- Johannes Koch (twillo, Universität Osnabrück)