Location
Event Description
As generative AI (GenAI) continues to reshape the educational landscape, educators must critically examine its implications for course design. How can we adapt our courses to ensure meaningful learning in a post-GenAI world? How can we harness its potential while mitigating risks to student learning? This seminar explores the evolving role of GenAI in higher education, emphasizing learner-centered teaching practices--such as backward design, transparency, and active learning--as essential strategies for navigating both the opportunities and challenges posed by GenAI. We will examine how GenAI disrupts traditional models of teaching and assessment, highlighting course design choices that intentionally promote deep learning and critical thinking in this new era.
Speaker Bio: Dr. Lourdes Alemán is an Associate Director at MIT's Teaching and Learning Lab (TLL). She earned her Ph.D. in Biology from MIT, studying RNA interference (RNAi) with Professor Phil Sharp. She later completed a postdoc in curriculum innovation with Professor Graham Walker's HHMI MIT Education Group. As a postdoc and research scientist, she helped develop software tools for teaching experimental design and data analysis, including collaborations with the MIT-Haiti Initiative. Before joining TLL, she worked at MIT's Open Learning, supporting MIT faculty in blended and online education. At TLL, Lourdes trains graduate students and postdocs in college-level teaching, advises faculty on classroom innovation, and previously designed and taught a hands-on biology module on novel antibiotic discovery for first-year students. She has served on university committees focused on mentoring and advising. Drawing from her experiences as a Cuban immigrant student, she developed MIT's first curriculum on growth mindset and co-founded Flipping Failure, a campus-wide initiative for students to share their stories of academic challenges and the strategies they have used to overcome them.
