The VET Development Centre (VDC) in Melbourne hosts a day of presentations and workshops on AI. There is the option of viewing the presentations on zoom and I pop in and out as my schedule allows. Presenters would have just recently (or in the process) of completing an International Specialised Skills Institute (ISS) Institute fellowship.
The day begins with a welcome to the day, acknowledgement to country and housekeeping for the attendees at the VDC itself, from Martin Powell (CEO or the VDC) and Dr. Katrina Jojkity (CEO of the ISS Institute). Thanked everyone at the VDC for hosting the session. Provided a brief background (and video) of the ISS fellowships which have been going since 2000 and their have been over 200 fellowships across a wide range of craft/trade skills and VET pedagogy/systems/innovations.
Craig Robertson (CEO of Victoria Skills Authority (VSA) begins with a short welcome address. Began with the quote 'we hold these truths to be self-evidenct, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by the Creator with certain unalienable Rights. That among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.' How does VET contribute to the pursuit of happiness? In times past, happiness was quite a different concept than its more 'frivolous' present version. In VET education, the similar attribute would be self-actualisation. Digitisation represents a major challenge to all. Task/units of competency have been the main outcomes of VET, but what happens now with AI? Education needs to now change to keeps up. We can tweak the current system but this may not be enough. There is a need to move away from task based competencies towards empower people to pursue happiness - which for everyone is always 'work in progress'. As always, Craig's summarises the challenges in a way that will be understood by the audience :)
Notes taken from sessions:
- AI in Action: developing curriculum resources with AI with Leigh Dwyer (William Angliss) - notes on 3/4 of the session. Began with a Slido - most were 'getting there' along with their organisations ' getting there' or 'just starting'. His report had a framework of teams, tools, design, VET, Docs, ethics as the parts that inform curriculum development with Gen AI. Used this to also present on each of these with examples.
(teams) Shared a case study where a team created a game, using AI. Roles were defined, testing and feedback led to revisions. AI accelerated the workflow. Another example using Chat GPT and Grok to craft lyrics, iLovesong to make music, Leonardo to create artwork, ChatGPT and Grok for worksheets, DistroKid to publish music and Vidmuse to create music videos (for resources for English teacher training - TESOL). Album published to T-soul. (Tools) Another example a video to help learn OSASCOMP and discussed how to create resources which engage learners but also help them remember key concepts. Shared the work of Eric Tsui - on using ChatGPT to enhance student's personal learning.
(Design) (VET) Shared how to undertake Industry Aligned Design (IAD) - listing scenario and examples - company, role, job duties, way of working (SOP) reason to do the work. which can be used to build resources that are authentic - for instance - a day in the life of ---.
(Docs) Moved on the document management with mail merge. Workflow shared.
- Teaching the future: Integrating cybersecurity into education. Faraz Khan (Victoria University). Report yet to be published. Began with a background on his work and the objectives of his fellowship. He visited US of A (decentralised system, high variation, education-driven approach - starting from school). Canada / Ontario has strong industry education collaboration. workforce and industry driven approach. Estonia has an integrated, system-wide digital competence. Embedded into education.
Themes include - coordination through frameworks (reduce fragmentation, shared skills and role structures, curriculum guidance, and coordination through policy and standards); Teacher capability as a constrain (requires structured learning, industry engagement and system support required); practice-based learning (using simulations/labs, work-integrated learning, and scaling these through cloud platforms and industry partnerships); cybersecurity across disciplines (across all industries, but requires sector-specific application, still largely IT-focused in practice and cross-disciplinary integration emergent). Provided examples of cross-disciplinary models in practice; and Pathways and workforce alignments (connecting education to workforce teaching - structured pathways, industry aligned learning, expand pathways, and non-formal pathways).
Shared the various system challenges and tensions - fragmentation, sustainability, access and equity and the experience gap. Implications for VET are many - need to embed cybersecurity across disciplines, build teacher capability, expand practice-based learning and strengthen pathways and partnerships. Q & A ensued.
- AI integration for student engagement with Thuy Cao Reynolds (AMES Australia). Report yet to be published. There are challenges in the Australian workforce and VET - low completion rates in VET (50%) along with low participation rates when VET is Australia's largest workforce pipelines. Improving engagement can be useful. Engagement has cognitive, emotional, behavioural and social dimensions. These then add as forces to influence student engagement. Cognitive forces can be supported through hybrid human AI shared regulation in learning models, personalised learning and learning activity that promote critical thinking; emotion can be tapped into with game based learning to increaser fun, curiosity etc. AI can also be a team member, tutor, mentor and simulator. These influence wellbeing and change /transformation through learning.
To test the framework above visited Singapore (SMU - chatbot to understand people and culture), Germany (VR for German language practice and ChatGPT as a language learning assistant) to see and experience AI integration. Wellbeing (through teachers acting as mediators between students and AI tools, and change management - instructor led-training, were also observed.
Shared considerations for organisations - alignment to strategic vision, invest in teaching and learning and embark on and support change management. Teachers also must be considered. Competencies and support required on how to select the appropriate AI tools as matched to learning activities - pedagogical alignment, usability, accessibility, ethics and data privacy and well-being. Shared a guide for the selection process. Thanks for presenting on two references from my work - Identity, pedagogy and technology enhanced and Ai in VET.
Stressed importance for considerations for teachers - model enthusiasm and build trust around AI use and integrate tools to boost learning and performance. Considerations for students include the need to learn how to learn before using AI and be prepared with purpose and independence. Include learning goals, independent thinking, focused prompting, Ai literacy and learning how to learn. Proposed considerations for Department of Education and Training - quality teaching / learning and lifelong learning, future workforce and career readiness and sustainable and innovative education system development.
Closed the presentation with UNESCO ' education transforms lives; but education must also be transformed to meet the challenges of today and tomorrow'.
Two applied workshops of 45 minutes each follow. One with Faraz Khan - 'think like a hacker: practical cybersecurity skills for everyday protection' and Leigh Dwyer on 'building capability and capacity within the VET sector using AI'. I will need to get back to these through the recordings (along with the missed presentation earlier on).