Educating a Responsible AI Workforce: Piloting a Curricular Module on AI Policy in a Graduate Machine Learning Course
Weichert, James, Eldardiry, Hoda
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
As artificial intelligence (AI) technologies begin to permeate diverse fields--from healthcare to education--consumers, researchers and policymakers are increasingly raising concerns about whether and how AI is regulated. It is therefore reasonable to anticipate that alignment with principles of'ethical' or'responsible' AI, as well as compliance with law and policy, will form an increasingly important part of AI development. Yet, for the most part, the conventional computer science curriculum is ill-equipped to prepare students for these challenges. To this end, we seek to explore how new educational content related to AI ethics and AI policy can be integrated into both ethics-and technical-focused courses. This paper describes a two-lecture AI policy module that was piloted in a graduate-level introductory machine learning course in 2024. The module, which includes an in-class active learning game, is evaluated using data from student surveys before and after the lectures, and pedagogical motivations and considerations are discussed. We find that the module is successful in engaging otherwise technically-oriented students on the topic of AI policy, increasing student awareness of the social impacts of a variety of AI technologies and developing student interest in the field of AI regulation. Introduction The explosive growth of artificial intelligence (AI) technologies is widely documented and increasingly evident in everyday life: some responses from the search engine Google now include an "AI Overview" inserted before the first webpage link; companies like Tesla and Waymo have seen success in implementing partial or full autonomous driving in vehicles on live roads; and "Apple Intelligence" was the flagship feature for the launch of Apple's new smartphone in fall 2024. Yet what legal or policy response this technological growth will precipitate is less certain [1, 2]. Nevertheless, it should be expected that the development and enactment of regulatory frameworks for AI will demand AI engineers with a command not only of the technical intricacies of AI models, but also of the policy and regulatory landscape for AI development and compliance [3].
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Feb-11-2025
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