| Literature DB >> 36135606 |
Rebecca Marrone1, Victoria Taddeo1, Gillian Hill2.
Abstract
Creativity is a core 21st-century skill taught globally in education systems. As Artificial Intelligence (AI) is being implemented in classrooms worldwide, a key question is proposed: how do students perceive AI and creativity? Twelve focus groups and eight one-on-one interviews were conducted with secondary school-aged students after they received training in both creativity and AI over eight weeks. An analysis of the interviews highlights that the students view the relationship between AI and creativity as four key concepts: social, affective, technological and learning factors. The students with a higher self-reported understanding of AI reported more positive thoughts about integrating AI into their classrooms. The students with a low understanding of AI tended to be fearful of AI. Most of the students indicated a thorough understanding of creativity and reported that AI could never match human creativity. The implications of the results are presented, along with recommendations for the future, to ensure AI can be effectively integrated into classrooms.Entities:
Keywords: artificial intelligence; creativity; student attitudes
Year: 2022 PMID: 36135606 PMCID: PMC9504190 DOI: 10.3390/jintelligence10030065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intell ISSN: 2079-3200
Content units, categories and concepts derived from the qualitative data.
| Content Units | Category | Concept |
|---|---|---|
| Conversation and lack of awareness | AI Facilitators/Barriers | Social |
| Student Interest | ||
| Social Intelligence/Social Skills | ||
| Age Barriers | ||
| AI as outlet for creativity | ||
| AI as facilitator for inspiration | ||
| Creativity is a form of self expression | ||
| Comfortable | Comfort level with AI | Affective |
| Neutral | ||
| Uncomfortable | ||
| Access and use of AI | Perceptions of AI | Technological |
| Technology Focus | ||
| Advanced Technology | ||
| Automated | ||
| Coding/Programming | ||
| Computers | ||
| Futuristic | ||
| Not human | ||
| Robots | ||
| Technology impeding AI | ||
| Human experience can never compare to machines | ||
| AI provides easy access to information | Impact of school environment | Learning |
| AI provides global connection | ||
| AI provides idea support | ||
| AI provides learning aid | ||
| AI can increase perspectives | ||
| Creativity helps manage time | ||
| Creativity can increase novel ideas | ||
| Structure of assignments limit opportunities for creativity | ||
| Creative block | ||
| Lack of foundational knowledge to be creative | ||
| Creativity takes time | ||
| It is a risk being creative | ||
| (Lack of) creative experience | ||
| Independent thinker | ||
| Encourage creativity | ||
| Creates opportunities | ||
| Creative Problem Solving |
Table A1 illustrates that the students in the study understood the relationship between creativity and AI in terms of four fundamental dimensions (referred to as ‘concepts’ in the table): social, affective, technological and learning factors.