Throughout the semester, DI student fellows collaborated on workshops at the intersection of creativity and cutting edge technology.
Hack Your Homework & Imagination
Julian Leff, a sophomore computer information systems major, has long had an interest in ethical and practical applications of artificial intelligence. Before this semester, that interest was resigned to tinkering on his own. So, he wanted to create an opportunity for other curious students to explore AI.
鈥淲e're really riding the edge of a new technology, and it definitely has ramifications,鈥 Leff said.
David Foster, a DI faculty fellow and associate professor in the School of Media and Journalism, led the first workshop, 鈥淧ixel Quest: An AI Image Challenge.鈥
The workshop examined the role of AI in the creative field through a game-like environment. The following workshop, 鈥淗ack Your Imagination: Explore AI for Storytelling,鈥 challenged participants to make a story in any medium using only AI.
In Foster鈥檚 opinion, AI will usher in a new era for creativity just as the smartphone did more than a decade ago. However, 鈥渢he internet doesn鈥檛 abide by a code of ethics,鈥 he said. To stay ahead of this, students and faculty must familiarize themselves with the technology.
鈥淯nderstanding where AI has a place in society, they feel confident in saying, 鈥楾his is my opinion, because I've worked with it in this context,鈥欌 Leff said.
Through their collaboration, Foster and Leff found perhaps an unlikely common ground as professor and student on the applications of AI in the classroom.
The final workshop, 鈥,鈥 will take place just in time for finals at 6 p.m. on Monday, April 15 in the DI HUB. There, participants can learn how to use AI in preparation for their upcoming exams, including how to make a study guide.
Foster has no problem with that.
鈥淭here's no way that we can go into this age of AI and think that we're going to teach the same way that we taught in 1990,鈥 he said.
The Feminine Urge to Inspire
For women鈥檚 history month, Anna Leitson, a sophomore integrated mathematics major, wanted to create an outlet for those passionate about women鈥檚 rights and history. So, she co-created the workshop 鈥淭he Feminine Urge to Inspire鈥 with another DI student fellow, Breanna Lowery.
鈥淚 just want women to know that they have other strong females around them,鈥 Leitson said.
For the workshop, participants used the dye sublimation printer to create vision boards made from fabric based on women in history, innovation and the women who inspire them in their lives. On the back of their board, participants wrote their goals and passions.
Leitson plans to assemble the boards into one quilt, with the hope of displaying it in the DI HUB gallery.
鈥淓very woman, every little girl, has her own goals,鈥 Leitson said. 鈥淵ou cannot compare them. Every girl wants to do something different.鈥