Vallis, Carmen, Stephanie Wilson, and Alison Casey. “Generative AI: Beyond the Binaries with Metaphors.” Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2024. doi:10.14742/apubs.2024.1408.
When | Why |
---|---|
Sep-10-25 | A vibrant digital illustration depicting a diverse team of experts miniaturized and comfortably gathered inside an open, modern backpack. The experts represent people of various ages, races, body types, genders (including non-binary and transgender ind... |
ASCILITE 2024 Navigating the Terrain:
Emerging Frontiers in Learning Spaces, Pedagogies, and Technologies
Carmen Vallis, Stephanie Wilson, Alison Casey The University of Sydney Business School
The integration of Generative AI (GenAI) technology in higher education demands active and creative pedagogical responses. In this paper we report on an emerging creative educational design approach which introduces activities for working with GenAI in imaginative ways. Through multidisciplinary research, we are iteratively designing activities to engage educators and students in creative and critical inquiry of GenAI with metaphors. First, we introduce the background and rationale for using metaphor to explore GenAI in education. Our approach to generative AI draws on postdigital ideas that consider technology as entwined in our lives, rather than as separate tools. Put simply, GenAI is neither inherently good nor bad for education. Research on metaphor as a powerful learning tool of analogy is reviewed. A detailed account of workshop learning activities is then provided, including their design, implementation, and preliminary findings. The aim is to broaden approaches to using and integrating such technologies, and to serve as an alternative model for other educators to adapt for their own practices. Finally, we discuss future, creative possibilities with GenAI and metaphor.
Keywords:Higher Education, GenAI, metaphor, creative inquiry, postdigital, qualitative
Introduction
This paper reports an emerging critical study on Generative AI (GenAI) in higher education. Educators are asked to develop critical AI capabilities and to rethink pedagogies in light of GenAI (Carvalho et al., 2022; (Markauskaite et al., 2022). Educational researchers call for generative AI “to serve as an active partner in sustained social, creative and intellectual pursuits” (Dawson et al., 2023, p. 1051). Others indicate that more sensemaking is needed about the generative AI phenomenon (Lodge et al., 2023) and the balance of how human and AI technologies best combine in new learning and knowledge practices (Siemens et al., 2022).
Discussion about technologies such as ChatGPT often centre around the pressing need for institutions to respond, and a belief that AI has the power to change teaching and learning dynamics (Bearman et al., 2023). The promise is that Gen AI could offer enhanced learning experiences and teaching efficiencies (Lodge et al., 2023). Many are optimistic that GenAI can be used to update and enhance traditional assessment and teaching practices (Jensen et al., 2024). Yet institutions swing between enthusiastic GenAI adoption and strict policies. GenAI raises issues, such as ethical and privacy concerns and data bias (Lodge et al., 2023). While educators are understandably concerned about GenAI’s effects on learning, students and academic integrity, more exploratory and productive uses of GenAI are also needed (Jensen et al., 2024), where teachers might engage with GenAI in more creative and nuanced ways (Gupta, 2024).
Metaphors in a postdigital world
Our approach draws on postdigital ideas that considers technology as enmeshed in our lives; the digital and material are inseparable (Gourlay, 2019), and GenAI is more than a tool. Hence, we propose alternative learning activities to explore emerging technologies as a practice that involves human creativity, problem solving, critical and collaborative thinking (Carvalho et al., 2022). Through metaphor we aim to provoke critical reflection and collaboration and move away from instrumental approaches to educational technologies (Gupta, 2024). We do not teach participants how to prompt or direct them on how to use technology. Rather we use metaphors to facilitate creative and critical inquiry, without framing GenAI in a binary of good or bad for education.
Metaphors are key to making sense of new experience and knowledge. Metaphorical thinking enables us to understand abstract concepts, linking new to past experiences by analogy (Lakoff & Johnson, 2003). In the learning process, “abstract notions are encoded in words and phrases that constitute metaphors based in concrete, embodied experience of a material world” (Gee, 2003, p. 76). While most know metaphors as a poetic technique, metaphors play a far more fundamental role in our thinking:
Our concepts structure what we perceive, how we get around in the world, and how we relate to other people. Our conceptual system thus plays a central role in defining our everyday realities... the way we think, what we experience, and what we do every day is very much a matter of metaphor. But our conceptual system is not something we are normally aware of (Lakoff & Johnson, 2003, p.3).
Context
The three authors designed, developed and facilitated the activities below to test the idea of learning and teaching with GenAI metaphors, informed by the literature discussed above and guided by connected learning principles (Bryant, 2022). The workshop participants were fifteen colleagues from a multidisciplinary team, including business academics, educational developers, learning designers, project officers, and media producers, who self-selected to join the workshop. Our research was approved and conducted in accordance with the university’s Human Research Ethics Committee protocols —Project number: [2019/892].
Workshop Design and Implementation
The aim is for participants to gain hands-on experience, while sparking critical analysis and conversation through a social and creative process. The workshop follows a structured methodology, often found in design thinking learning sequences that are aimed at capability building that is participatory, and encourages developing an open, creative and ethical mindset (Beligatamulla et al., 2019).
The rest of this section details our deployment of the workshop, along with suggested variations for those wanting to run such a workshop themselves. It runs through the process of unpacking metaphor for collective sensemaking in a workshop, including facilitator prompts, and the flow of activities participants are guided through. Activities are designed for social interactive experiences, including group work, with digital and material resources.
Orientation: Why metaphors?
Participants may not have encountered creative approaches to technology before. Where appropriate, facilitators can briefly discuss creativity as a key future skill, emphasising its value to learning and teaching in different academic disciplines. For example, blackout poetry—where text is selectively redacted to reveal new meanings—offers a versatile, creative way to engage with diverse subjects by obscuring some words and emphasising others (Vallis et al., 2022).
The facilitators then explicitly connected learning with metaphors. To introduce metaphors, we presented a simple slide with a definition, with text from MetaphorsWe Live By(Lakoff & Johnson, 2003). As a warm-up, participants brainstormed and contributed common metaphors about teachers via a QR code to Mentimeter and their ideas were visualised in a word cloud for further discussion. Then we showed an example of metaphors about ChatGPT or other GenAI tools such as Pacitti and Lodge (2024, July 4).
Activity 1: Generating metaphors
Here the aim is to create a ‘gallery of metaphors’ to visualise and articulate ideas. Facilitators can segue into this activity by noting that metaphors reflect and shape our ideas about technology too (data mining, prompt engineering, to name a few examples).
Participants individually brainstorm as many metaphors as they can (quantity over quality). Facilitator prompts with this question: ‘ChatGPT is...?’ . We facilitated this with pens, paper, stickies and whiteboards to anchor the activity as a material experience. Online whiteboards or collaborative documents could also be used.
Participants then form small groups. Metaphors are shared on a group whiteboard. Group members are invited to build on these ideas and add more or notes. Facilitator prompts include: Which metaphors resonate with your experiences of ChatGPT? Any common metaphors? Seeing these, does it give you other ideas or insights? How could they be further developed?
Where time permits, groups extend the generation of metaphors using various GenAI modalities. Groups could choose another abstract concept to metaphorically represent (e.g. a discipline-specific term). Facilitators frame this activity as play rather than achieving a technical skill. Each small group then:
Activity 2: Articulating ideas aboutGenAI
The aim of this activity is to surface ideas and identify the most resonant metaphors for further examination. Participants visit the metaphor galleries, placing stickers or further notes on ideas that resonate. Facilitator prompts include: Which item do you like, dislike, or are curious about? Why these items? Where time permits this could also be extended by conversing on the topic with an AI chatbot.
Ideally, there is time for a break before the next activity, which is cognitively challenging. This also allows time for facilitators to document and reflect on the metaphor galleries during the break.
Activity 3: Analysing metaphors
This is a group activity where ideas are synthesised around emergent themes. Each group is asked to explain their metaphors, and where relevant, talk about the effects of using multiple AI modalities. Together, all evaluate the metaphors, noticing commonalities, differences and surprises. Facilitators ask which ideas belong together and group accordingly. Facilitator prompts include: What did you notice? What are the strengths, limitations and perspectives offered by each metaphor? Does the AI modality have a different effect?
Reflection
Finally, participants are invited to individually reflect on their workshop experiences and implications for practice. In our context, we asked participants to reflect on the activities and implications for education that align with the principles and our teamwork of the Connected Learning at Scale (CLaS) project. Facilitator prompts include: What might we do differently? Could metaphors help make sense of GenAI in teaching or other professional learning situations? In further developing your own understanding? In conversations with colleagues? With students? We also asked participants to share their reflections if they felt comfortable.
Discussion and Future Directions
Feedback on the workshop activities was positive. Participants reported that the collaborative nature of the workshop also fostered a sense of community and shared learning among this diverse, multidisciplinary group. While we have not evaluated whether the workshop contributed to participants adopting new approaches, participants have expressed an interested in building on the conversation in an upcoming workshop which uses object-based learning to further explore AI practices in higher education.
The whiteboard discussions were compelling. Participants characterised AI as both a promise and a threat, with an unknown future. Metaphors like “personal assistant,” “research associate,” and “smart buddy,” pointed to GenAI’s capacity to augment human capabilities. The dark side of GenAI was also prominent in discussions, with metaphors such as “sinister robot” and “plagiarism machine.” The future of AI could be a journey of both hope and fear, like a “storm (in the hope bubble) – eventually a rainbow.” GenAI was also seen as a “bread starter”, an ingredient in baking, that needs nurturing and care to develop. There was also pragmatic yet cautious acceptance of the technology as a “necessary evil”. The workshop provoked the kind of critical, ethical and creative thinking about GenAI and its potential applications in education that we had hoped. This was particularly evident in the final reflective session of the workshop where participants described how the activities helped foreground important aspects such as positionality and cross-cultural dimensions associated with AI.
However, we acknowledge that the workshop implementation outlined in this paper had constraints. The workshop was 90 minutes and would benefit from more time for creative hands-on play with GenAI. Our participants were colleagues with whom we work closely, who are educational innovators, more likely to accept and experiment with new ideas such as this one. While the workshop provides a replicable model for critical reflection about GenAI for both educators and students, these ideas need more development in different contexts, and we are cautious about making exaggerated claims about our work to date. Our plans are to offer such activities more widely, incorporating feedback to iteratively refine future sessions, and to further research this topic.
A wide range of pedagogical strategies for integrating technologies and new practices into educational spaces is needed. We hope to place our work among the multitude of possible approaches to GenAI in education, particularly to imagine different futures. For example, participants might be asked to “respond creatively to provocations with, against and around generative AI” with a choice of multimodal GenAI and or physical materials such as pens and papers (Drumm et al., 2024).
It seems likely GenAI will be a game-changer in our society and education (Siemens et al., 2022); one that will continue to provoke much fear and awe into the future. Both theory and the ongoing debates about generative AI suggest that multidisciplinary methods may inform our thinking and practice. At the very least, the integration of Generative AI (GenAI) technologies in higher education demands different pedagogical responses that are active, creative and critical. Creative inquiry is one such approach (Vallis et al., 2023).
We offer this approach for future development as an alternative for learning with emerging technologies in education, providing a flexible educational design that may be adapted for different contexts or audiences. To use a common metaphor, we report on our small beginning as ‘food for thought’ that facilitates perspectives beyond binary views of educational technology.
Acknowledgment
We thank the Business Co-design team for their participation and sharing their insights for this project as part of the broader Connected Learning at Scale (CLaS) project.
References
Beligatamulla, G., Rieger, J., Franz, J., & Strickfaden, M. (2019). Making Pedagogic Sense of Design Thinking in the Higher Education Context. Open Education Studies, 1(1), 91–105. https://doi.org/10.1515/edu-2019-0006
Bryant, P. (2022, March 2). Transforming Business Education Through Connected Learning - Part 3. Co-Design Research Group. https://diberg.blog/2022/03/03/transforming-business-education-through-connected-learning-part-3/
Carvalho, L., Martinez-Maldonado, R., Tsai, Y.-S., Markauskaite, L., & De Laat, M. (2022). How can we design for learning in an AI world? Computers and Education: Artificial Intelligence, 100053. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.caeai.2022.100053
Dawson, S., Joksimovic, S., Mills, C., Gašević, D., & Siemens, G. (2023). Advancing theory in the age of artificial intelligence. British Journal of Educational Technology, 54(5), 1051–1056. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjet.13343
Drumm, L., Beetham, H., Cronin, C., & McIlwhan, R. (2024). Generating AI Alternatives: Collaborating and creating intersections. Networked Learning Conference, 14. https://journals.aau.dk/index.php/nlc/article/view/8185
Gee, J. P. (2003). What video games have to teach us about learning and literacy (1st ed.) . Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1145/950566.950595
Gourlay, L. (2021). There Is No “Virtual Learning”: The Materiality of Digital Education. Journal of New Approaches inEducational Research, 10(1), 57. https://doi.org/10.7821/naer.2021.1.649
Gupta, A., Atef, Y., Mills, A., & Bali, M. (2024). Assistant Parrot or Colonizing Loudspeaker? ChatGPT Metaphors for Developing Critical AI Literacies. OpenPraxis, 16(1). https://doi.org/10.55982/openpraxis.16.1.631
Jensen, L. X., Buhl, A., Sharma, A., & Bearman, M. (2024). Generative AI and higher education: a review of claims from the first months of ChatGPT. HigherEducation. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-024-01265-3
Lakoff, G., & Johnson, M. (2003). Metaphors We Live By. The University of Chicago Press. https://doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226470993.001.0001
Lodge, J. M., Thompson, K., & Corrin, L. (2023). Mapping out a research agenda for generative artificial intelligence in tertiary education. Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 39(1), 1–8. https://doi.org/10.14742/ajet.8695
Markauskaite, L., Marrone, R., Poquet, O., Knight, S., Martinez-Maldonado, R., Howard, S., Tondeur, J., De Laat, M., Buckingham Shum, S., Gašević, D., & Siemens, G. (2022). Rethinking the entwinement between artificial intelligence and human learning: What capabilities do learners need for a world with AI? Computers and Education: Artificial Intelligence, 3, 100056. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.caeai.2022.100056
Pacitti, H., & Lodge, J. (2024, July 4). Wars, lanes, babies, rabbits, and shovels: Reflections on the New South Wales Higher Education Summit. Education & Student Experience-UNSW Sydney. https://www.education.unsw.edu.au/news-events/news/reflections-on-nsw-he-summit-2024
Siemens, G., Marmolejo-Ramos, F., Gabriel, F., Medeiros, K., Marrone, R., Joksimovic, S., & De Laat, M. (2022). Human and artificial cognition. Computers and Education: Artificial Intelligence, 3,100107. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.caeai.2022.100107
Vallis, C., & Taleo, W. (2022). Creative practices: thinking and thriving together. ASCILITEPublications, e22150. https://doi.org/10.14742/apubs.2022.150
Vallis, C., Taleo, W., Wheeler, P., Casey, A., Tucker, S., Luu, J., & Zeivots, S. (2023). Collaborative sensemaking with generative AI: A muse, amuse, muse. ASCILITE Publications, 573–577. https://doi.org/10.14742/apubs.2023.514
Vallis, C., Wilson, S., & Casey, A. (2024). Generative AI: Beyond the binaries with metaphors. In Cochrane, T., Narayan, V., Bone, E., Deneen, C., Saligari, M., Tregloan, K., Vanderburg, R. (Eds.), Navigating the Terrain: Emerging frontiers in learning spaces, pedagogies, and technologies. Proceedings ASCILITE 2024. Melbourne (pp. 590-595). https://doi.org/10.14742/apubs.2024.1408
Note: All published papers are refereed, having undergone a double-blind peer-review process.
The author(s) assign a Creative Commons by attribution license enabling others to distribute, remix, tweak, and build upon their work, even commercially, as long as credit is given to the author(s) for the original creation.
© Vallis, C., Wilson, S., & Casey, A. 2024
Added September 10, 2025 at 7:01pm
by Paul Allison
Title: A vibrant digital illustration depicting a diverse team of experts miniaturized and comfortably gathered inside an open, modern backpack. The experts represent people of various ages, races, body types, genders (including non-binary and transgender ind...
Logging in, please wait...
0 General Document comments
0 Sentence and Paragraph comments
0 Image and Video comments
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment Hide Thread Detail
Absolutely! To help you visually capture the metaphorical idea that “AI is emergent,” here’s a detailed, inclusive prompt for a text-to-image generator, crafted with your artistic curiosity and scholarly approach in mind:
“A conceptual digital illustration depicting the metaphor ‘AI is emergent.’ Show a diverse group of people—varying in gender, race, age, body size, and ability—gathered around the roots of a giant, glowing, semi-transparent tree. The tree’s roots intertwine with intricate circuitry and neural networks, gradually morphing upward into branches blossoming with light, data streams, and flowing organic shapes. The scene is set in a futuristic yet welcoming urban park at dawn, with city skyline in the soft background. Each person engages with the growing roots and branches, symbolizing collaboration and unexpected connections. Use a surreal, luminous color palette, emphasizing movement, transformation, and curiosity, with dynamic lighting evoking wonder. quality: ‘hd’”
How to use this prompt for image generation:
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment Hide Thread Detail
Absolutely! Here’s an expanded, inclusive, and detailed prompt to help you generate a striking image for your metaphor, “AI is a vacuum cleaner”:
A whimsical digital illustration representing the metaphor “AI is a vacuum cleaner.” The main subject: an imaginative, futuristic vacuum cleaner with subtle robotic features, gently consuming streams of swirling data—bits, numbers, and symbols—from an eclectic, messy workspace that blends elements of both art and academia: scattered sketches, books, paintbrushes, digital tablets, and research papers. The diverse workspace features people from various genders, races, ages, and abilities—such as a Black non-binary painter with a prosthetic hand, a South Asian elderly scholar with glasses, and a wheelchair user in chic attire—collaborating and reacting with surprise, curiosity, and delight. Background details include vivid, saturated colors, abstract technological motifs, and shafts of golden light illuminating the scene to symbolize insight and discovery. Capture it all with a playful, surrealist style and wide-angle composition. quality: ‘hd’
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
Here’s what ChatGPT says about this image: “AI is both the dazzling promise and the driver of upheaval, offering inspiration and danger at the same time.”
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
Certainly! Here’s an inclusive, detailed, and high-definition AI image prompt based on your metaphor, “AI is a team of experts in my backpack,” suitable for generating rich and meaningful visual results:
A vibrant digital illustration depicting a diverse team of experts miniaturized and comfortably gathered inside an open, modern backpack. The experts represent people of various ages, races, body types, genders (including non-binary and transgender individuals), and visible and invisible disabilities. One person uses a wheelchair, while another has a high-tech prosthetic arm. The team collaborates energetically, using items such as laptops, charts, books, and tablets. Each expert has their own specialty: a cheerful scientist in a lab coat, a thoughtful artist sketching ideas, an engineer adjusting blueprints, a wise elder sharing advice, and a young coder analyzing data. The backpack rests on the ground next to a student—gender-neutral and ethnically ambiguous—who smiles confidently, ready for a new day at school. The background is a welcoming classroom filled with educational posters, adaptive learning tools, and bright natural light streaming through the windows. The whole scene is rendered with a warm, optimistic palette and in a semi-realistic style, with soft, inviting lighting and high definition details. quality: ‘hd’
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
Certainly! Here’s how you could structure a detailed, inclusive, high-definition image prompt for the activity, “AI is a writing partner,” with the focus on “Generating metaphors”:
A vibrant digital illustration of a diverse group of writers collaborating with an AI interface on laptops and tablets, engaging in the creative activity of generating metaphors. The scene is set in a bright, modern co-working space filled with natural light and greenery. The group includes people of various ages, races, ethnicities, genders, body types, and abilities: a young Asian woman with a prosthetic arm jotting down notes; a middle-aged Black non-binary person using a wheelchair, enthusiastically pointing at a digital screen; an older white man with a beard and glasses thoughtfully holding a notepad; and a teenaged Latinx person with curly hair and headphones spinning a metaphor with the AI on their tablet. The AI is visualized as a friendly, translucent holographic presence hovering above the table, “whispering” imaginative words and phrases into the mix—depicted as colorful, swirling word clouds. Books, coffee mugs, and creative sketches add to the collaborative feeling. The artistic style is semi-realistic with a painterly touch, warm tones, and dynamic composition, highlighting teamwork and the joyful spark of co-creation. quality: ‘hd’
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
Paul Allison is a nationally-known educator and EdTech expert… (more)
Show students wearing the backpacks
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
General Document Comments 0
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment