Empowering Educators in the Age of AI: An Empirical Study on Creating custom GPTs in Qualitative Research Method education
Qian Huang, Thijs Willems

TL;DR
This study demonstrates how educators can design custom GPT tools to actively support qualitative research education, enhancing student reflexivity and analytic skills while highlighting challenges like cognitive overload.
Contribution
It introduces a framework for educator-led design of custom GPTs in qualitative research education, filling gaps in active AI engagement and pedagogical integration.
Findings
GPT tools improved student interview skills
Tools supported structured analytic thinking
Students expressed concerns about cognitive overload
Abstract
As generative AI (Gen-AI) tools become more prevalent in education, there is a growing need to understand how educators, not just students, can actively shape their design and use. This study investigates how two instructors integrated four custom GPT tools into a Masters-level Qualitative Research Methods course for Urban Planning Policy students. Addressing two key gaps: the dominant framing of students as passive AI users, and the limited use of AI in qualitative methods education. The study explores how Gen-AI can support disciplinary learning when aligned with pedagogical intent. Drawing on the Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPACK) framework and action research methodology, the instructors designed GPTs to scaffold tasks such as research question formulation, interview practice, fieldnote analysis, and design thinking. Thematic analysis of student reflections, AI chat…
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