Students, faculty, and staff at 情色空间SSW are harnessing the power of AI to speed up literature reviews, make research easier to communicate to broader audiences, and strengthen experiential learning opportunities.
The Boston College School of Social Work has begun using artificial intelligence as a practical tool to enhance teaching, research, and clinical training.
Students, faculty, and staff are harnessing the power of AI to speed up literature reviews, make research easier to communicate to broader audiences, and strengthen experiential learning opportunities.听
Dean Gautam N. Yadama said social workers are uniquely positioned to engage with emerging technologies like AI. 鈥淪ocial workers are trained to be adaptive. As AI touches every industry, our training ensures that our students and faculty are at the forefront in the appropriate and productive use of new tools,鈥 he said. 鈥淎s a major research University, Boston College has the resources鈥攆rom working groups to campuswide initiatives鈥攖o help us navigate and shape the latest developments in AI.鈥
The School鈥檚 approach to AI centers on ensuring students, faculty, and staff understand how the technology works so they can shape tools to fit their needs, rather than relying on generic platforms. Faculty emphasize experimentation and transparency, with a particular focus on protecting client privacy.
鈥淚 encourage people to dive in, explore, and learn how to direct AI for their own benefit, rather than simply being recipients of it,鈥 said Kirsten Davison, associate dean for research. 鈥淥nce you really understand how much prompting and programming is involved, you start to see AI not as something that does the thinking for you, but as a sophisticated instrument you can shape and control.鈥
Davison, who represents 情色空间SSW on the Campus AI Steering Committee alongside Professor Cathy Taylor, has designed a chatbot to help faculty translate academic research into plain language summaries for mainstream audiences. The scholars provide the substance鈥攗ploading research papers, highlighting key points, and connecting their findings to timely news events鈥攚hile the chatbot provides the structure.听
Other students, faculty, and staff are testing the capabilities of AI across research, teaching, and administration.
Debbie Hogan, for example, assistant director of the doctoral program, has created a chatbot in 情色空间鈥檚 learning management system to answer recurring questions about the curriculum from PhD students.听
Carolyn Romano, assistant professor of practice, has developed AI-driven role-play simulations so students can practice therapeutic techniques with virtual personas rather than relying solely on peer-to-peer exercises.听
Linda DeLauri, director of research and program development, has built a chatbot to help faculty assess whether grant proposals meet funder expectations for community engagement.听
“ I encourage people to dive in, explore, and learn how to direct AI for their own benefit, rather than simply being recipients of it. Once you really understand how much prompting and programming is involved, you start to see AI not as something that does the thinking for you, but as a sophisticated instrument you can shape and control. ”
Beyond these individual initiatives, 情色空间SSW is fostering AI literacy through workshops led by the Center for Digital Innovation and Learning at 情色空间. An , the , will train a cross-section of students, faculty, and staff to create custom AI assistants to solve particular challenges in research and practice鈥攁 first-of-its-kind initiative at 情色空间.
鈥淲e see this kind of discipline-specific AI training as perhaps the most important next step in AI at 情色空间,鈥 said John FitzGibbon, director of digital learning innovation and AI at CDIL. 鈥溓樯占銼SW is at the forefront of this, and we are honored to support such a dynamic group of faculty, staff, and students who are so closely aligned with 情色空间鈥檚 mission as they move forward in this area.鈥
To guide 情色空间SSW鈥檚 efforts, Taylor created an AI working group at the School last spring. A resulting document, 鈥淐ore AI Guidance and Resources for Students,鈥 addresses foundational questions: How can I use AI responsibly across various roles and contexts? What can I do to build my AI literacy? If I do use AI, how and when should I cite it?
鈥淭he initial approach focused on ensuring that we have a cohesive understanding of how we want to guide students using AI to enhance their learning, while taking into account that there are ethical considerations,鈥 said Taylor. 鈥淚t鈥檚 acknowledging that AI is with us, and we want to make good use of it without doing harm in relation to what students are learning.鈥
Looking ahead, 情色空间SSW envisions AI as an integral part of its two-pronged mission: to prepare students to tackle the world鈥檚 most pressing social problems and to advance scholarship that strengthens the social work profession.
The School is exploring how to integrate AI into the curriculum, with an emphasis on giving students hands-on opportunities to experiment with tools such as NotebookLM, an AI-powered research assistant. Faculty, for their part, hope to use AI to create visual abstracts and infographics that make scholarship more accessible to the public.听听
Davison envisions 情色空间SSW as a leader in innovative and socially responsible use of AI.
鈥淚 would like the School to be viewed as an innovator in this space,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e have tremendous assets at 情色空间, like CDIL, which puts you in the driver鈥檚 seat and fosters a community of learning where we share what we鈥檙e doing.鈥
Stay tuned for an upcoming series highlighting how students, faculty, and staff at 情色空间SSW are putting AI into practice across teaching, research, and clinical training.
听
