Date
Publisher
arXiv
As AI increasingly saturates our daily lives, it is crucial that youth
develop skills to critically use and assess AI systems and envision better
alternatives. We apply theories from culturally responsive computing to design
and study a learning experience meant to support Black Muslim teen girls in
developing critical literacy with generative AI (GenAI). We investigate fashion
design as a culturally-rich, creative domain for youth to apply GenAI and then
reflect on GenAI's socio-ethical aspects in relation to their own
intersectional identities. Through a case study of a three-day, voluntary
informal education program, we show how fashion design with GenAI exposed
affordances and limitations of current GenAI tools. As the girls used GenAI to
create realistic depictions of their dream fashion collections, they
encountered socio-ethical limitations of AI, such as biased models and
malfunctioning safety systems that prohibited their generation of outputs that
reflected their creative ideas, bodies, and cultures. Discussions anchored in
the phenomenology of impossible creative realization supported participants'
development of critical AI literacy and descriptions of how preferable,
identity-affirming technologies would behave. Our findings contribute to the
field's growing understanding of how computing education experience designs
linking creativity and identity can support critical AI literacy development.
Who is the user?
Who age?
Why use AI?
Study design
