Skip to main content

StellenboschX: Higher education learning in the age of AI

This course explores how teachers in higher education can reconsider their approach to students’ learning in the age of AI. This course provides a learning-centred approach to the inclusion of AI when designing students’ learning opportunities, especially to scaffold learning, facilitate ideation, and provide real-time assistance. Additionally, the values and principles for responsible AI integration into learning practices are also discussed.

Higher education learning in the age of AI
3 weeks
5–8 hours per week
Self-paced
Progress at your own speed
Free
Optional upgrade available

There is one session available:

After a course session ends, it will be archivedOpens in a new tab.
Starts Apr 26
Ends Oct 23

About this course

Skip About this course

The course will be structured around three themes:

What is learning?

Here we ask the question: What is learning in higher education and in the age of AI? -facing and accessible AI systems are here to stay, and it is reshaping the higher education landscape. Framed within a social constructivist and learning-centred approach to learning and teaching, we consider what the facilitation of learning entails. We also consider how students' relationship to transformative knowledge can be negotiated in light of their increasingly complex relationship to machines.

Reimagining learning in the age of AI

Given the rapid developments in AI, its increased accessibility and inclusion in our lives, we can assume that higher education students are using (generative) AI technologies and that banning and/or proctoring the use thereof is not fruitful. The logical follow-up question is: Shouldn't we then rather reimagine learning in the age of AI as a collaborative effort between teachers, students and machines and foster academic integrity by modelling the responsible and ethical use of AI tools? In this session, course participants will critically reflect on the possible impact AI systems have on the higher education sector in their context specifically, and on designing learning in different disciplines and fields of study. The values needed to navigate learning in this changing landscape will also be discussed.

Redesigning learning for the age of AI

In the final session, we explore the question: How can learning be redesigned in and for the age of AI? Through the application of suggested principles and experiments with AI tools, course participants are encouraged to start engaging with AI in their learning and teaching practices. Through this process, participants are also equipped with transferrable knowledge and skills to guide higher education students to the responsible use of AI systems in their own learning.

At a glance

  • Language: English
  • Video Transcript: English
  • Associated programs:

What you'll learn

Skip What you'll learn

This course is designed for any professional involved with teaching in the higher education context, who is interested in exploring the intersection between user-facing generative AI tools and education.

At the end of this course, participants be able to:

  • Identify the role of the teacher as a facilitator of learning.
  • Critically reflect on their own approach to students’ learning and how that might need to be adapted.
  • Create a plan for incorporating generative AI into one of the suggested phases of students’ learning.
  • Highlight the criticality of a values-based approach to responsible AI use in student learning in HE.
  • Acquire transferrable knowledge and skills to guide students in the responsible use of AI systems in their own learning as a tool and not a crutch.

This course is part of AI in Higher Education Professional Certificate Program

Learn more 
Expert instruction
4 skill-building courses
Self-paced
Progress at your own speed
3 months
5 - 8 hours per week

Interested in this course for your business or team?

Train your employees in the most in-demand topics, with edX For Business.