Bild
Smiling girl i ljusblå blus
Amy Wanyu Ou
Länkstig

Universitetsstudenters kommunikativa kompetens i en tid präglad av generativ AI

Kultur & språk

Med titeln "University students’ communicative competence in the era of generative AI (or, getting to know Amy as a researcher?)", presenterar Amy Wanyu Ou både sitt postdoktorala arbete och sina pågående projekt. Specifikt kommer hon att diskutera språkteknologins inverkan – särskilt framväxten av generativ AI sedan 2022 – på studenters akademiska kommunikationskompetens inom den svenska högre utbildningssektorn.

Seminarium
Datum
19 nov 2024
Tid
15:15 - 16:30
Plats
Sal J444, Humanisten, Renströmsgatan 6

Medverkande
Amy Wanyu Ou, biträdande universitetslektor i engelska
Bra att veta
Seminariet ges på engelska
Arrangör
Institutionen för språk och litteraturer

Abstract (på engelska)

Over the last few years, my research has primarily explored students’ language practices and needs in international higher education contexts where English is used as the medium of instruction. While I work on a range of topics (such as language policy and intercultural communication), in this seminar, I will focus on research conducted during my postdoctoral work, as well as my current projects. Specifically, I will discuss the impact of language technology—especially the rise of generative AI since 2022—on students’ academic communication competence within Swedish higher education.

 

I will share findings from three key projects:

(1) a linguistic ethnography examining STEM students’ use of, and language ideology (conflict) regarding AI-generated language in English-medium master’s programmes;

(2) a nationwide survey investigating university students’ use of and attitudes towards AI language tools across Swedish universities; and

(3) the conceptualisation of Critical Gen-AI Literacy and the development of a micro-curriculum for doctoral academic writing.

 

I will discuss how these projects inform my theoretical understanding of university students’ communicative competence as ‘repertoire assemblages,’ a post-structuralist and post-humanist notion. I would also like to explore potential collaborations with colleagues interested in related areas.