This is the third in a series on AI from the Tertiary Education Quality and Standard Agency (TESQA) in Australia.
Assuring quality learning in a gen AI-integrated future: The role of adaptive capabilities follows on from two other reports - Assessment reform from the age of AI and Enacting assessment reform in a time of AI (summary on this blog).
In this report, adaptive capabilities in the age of AI are defined as drawn from the report authors' understandings of digital literacy tools to be used ethically and safely; distributed cognition as tasks shared between people, tools, artefacts and gen AI systems; hybrid cognition as thinking and learning within cognitive systems; and life long learning to sustain motivation, capability and adaptability. Agency and regulation from individuals, draw the four aspects of adaptive capabilities towards deeper disciplinary knowledge.
The report argues well for the attaining of the above capabilities before moving on to how learning environments need to be reshaped to help learners. Propositions for policy and practice are presented:
- establish adaptive capabilities as core graduate attributes.
- build institutional infrastructure for learning process evidence
- design learning environments that promote adaptive capabilities through evidence-informed practices
- transform pedagogical practice toward process-focused assessment
All in, a short but insightful and pragmatic report providing some ways forward into the age of AI.
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