Teaching AI Interactively: A Case Study in Higher Education
Jennifer M. Reddig, Scott Moon, Kaitlyn Crutcher, Christopher J. MacLellan

TL;DR
This case study demonstrates that redesigning AI courses with embodied simulations and collaborative activities enhances student engagement and confidence without affecting final grades.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel in-class instructional redesign inspired by CS Unplugged, improving student experience in AI education at scale.
Findings
Higher attendance in the redesigned course
Increased student confidence and engagement
No significant difference in final grades
Abstract
Introductory artificial intelligence (AI) courses present significant learning challenges due to abstract concepts, mathematical complexity, and students' diverse technical backgrounds. While active and collaborative pedagogies are often recommended, implementation can be difficult at scale due to large class sizes and the intensive design effort required of instructors. This paper presents a quasi-experimental case study examining the redesign of in-class instructional time in a university-level Introduction to Artificial Intelligence course. Inspired by CS Unplugged approaches, we redesigned the summer offering, integrating embodied, unplugged simulations, collaborative programming labs, and structured reflection to provide students with a first-person perspective on AI decision-making. We maintained identical assignments, exams, and assessments as the traditional lecture-based…
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