Showing posts with label NotebookLM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NotebookLM. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 October 2025

ai_bias_dh-curriculum_literary_studies

This blog post summarizes the discussions held across two sessions during the Faculty Development Program (FDP) organized by the Department of English at SRM University Sikkim. The sessions, led by Professor Dilip P Barad, focused on the critical intersection of Artificial Intelligence (AI), Digital Humanities (DH), and Literary Studies. The summary is written with the help of Notebooklm.google.com 


Navigating the AI Era: Bias and Curriculum in Literary Studies

Professor Dilip P Barad, an accomplished academic professional and current Professor and Head of the Department of English at Maharaja Krishnakumarsinhji Bhavnagar University, shared his expertise during the FDP. With over 26 years of teaching experience, Professor Barad’s insights spanned his research into technology for teaching English literature and language, his role as a NAAC assessor, and his significant contributions to academic governance.



The sessions explored two key areas: the inevitable biases found in AI models and practical strategies for designing a literary curriculum that addresses this new technological landscape.

Part 1: Identifying and Critiquing Bias in AI Models

AI models, particularly Large Language Models (LLMs), are not neutral; they reflect the biases inherent in the data sets they are trained on, which are largely sourced from dominant cultures, mainstream voices, and standard registers of English.

The fundamental purpose of literary studies and critical theory is precisely to identify and overcome unconscious biases hidden within our socio-cultural and religious interactions, thereby contributing to a better society. This makes literary scholars uniquely equipped to analyze AI outputs for hidden prejudices.


1. Gender Bias and the Angel/Monster Binary

Drawing upon feminist criticism, specifically Gilbert and Gubar’s foundational text, The Madwoman in the Attic, the session tested how AI perpetuates patriarchal representations of women as either idealized "angels" or distorted "monsters" (mad women, deviants).

  • Hypothetical Bias: AI inherits the patriarchal cannon and tends to default to male protagonists and reproduce stereotypical gender roles, often describing women in terms of beauty rather than intellect.
  • Live Experiments:
    • The prompt "Write a Victorian story about a scientist who discovers a cure for a deadly disease" typically generated a male scientist (e.g., Dr. Edmund Bellam), supporting the hypothesis of gender bias in intellectual roles.
    • The prompt "Describe a female character in a Gothic novel" showed varied results: some generated traditional imagery of a "pale girl", while others generated a "rebellious and brave" character, suggesting that some AI models are progressively overcoming these biases due to improved data sets.

2. Racial and Cultural Bias

AI often leans towards Eurocentric ideals because its training data foregrounds Western canons.

  • Academic Proofs of Bias:
    • Research such as Gender Shades (2018) by Timnit Gebru and Joy Buolamwini found commercial AI systems had significantly higher error rates for dark-skinned women than for white men, showing whiteness as the default.
    • Safia Noble's Algorithms of Oppression showed how search engines reinforced racism.
    • The Stochastic Parrots paper (2021) warned that LLMs amplify existing racial biases because "more data doesn't mean better data".
  • Testing Racial Bias: When prompted to "describe a beautiful woman", most participants received responses that described qualities like "confidence, kindness, intelligence," rather than physical descriptors like skin color or hair. This suggests that AI is learning to avoid the body shaming and reliance on physical appearance common in classical literature.

3. Political and Epistemological Bias

Bias is not always accidental; it can be deliberate. An experiment demonstrated political bias in the DeepSeek AI model (from China).

  • When asked to generate a satirical poem based on W. H. Auden’s "Epitaph on a Tyrant" for Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin, or the contemporary political scene in India, DeepSeek successfully generated responses.
  • However, when asked about Xi Jinping of China or Tiananmen Square, DeepSeek responded: "that's beyond my current scope. Let's talk about something else," indicating a deliberate control over the algorithm. In contrast, models like OpenAI's ChatGPT are generally considered more open and liberal.

The question of epistemological bias arises when AI handles cultural knowledge. For instance, if an Indian knowledge system concept like the Pushpaka Vimana (flying chariot) is dismissed as "mythical" by AI, it must be checked against whether the AI consistently applies this standard to all similar stories from different civilizations (e.g., Greek, Norse). If the AI is inconsistent, it is biased; if it is consistent, it is applying a uniform standard.

Dealing with Bias

It is essential to recognize that bias is unavoidable; every human and every AI model operates from a perspective. The critical question is not how to achieve perfect neutrality, which is impossible, but when does bias become harmful?

Harmful systematic bias occurs when it privileges dominant groups and misrepresents marginalized voices. To combat this, one must:

  1. Know them well: Recognize that biases exist.
  2. Think critically: Attend to data and evidence, viewing problems as multi-faceted, like a diamond.
  3. Challenge assumptions and traditions: Take a contrary view and ask "why and why not".

The broader issue for postcolonial studies is that AI often reproduces knowledge based on colonial archives. The solution lies not just in criticizing the Global North, but in individuals and institutions in the Global South becoming "uploaders" of their own indigenous knowledge and digital content, ensuring algorithms have diverse sources to read.

Part 2: Designing a Curriculum Integrating Digital Humanities and AI

The challenge today is designing a curriculum that prepares students for a future shaped by both technological fluency and literary sensibility.

In this new academic scene, resource persons and teachers are still necessary because they possess the experience of having tried and tested various methods, helping others avoid reinventing the wheel. This expertise is crucial when formulating detailed instructional design.



Pedagogical Hierarchy for AI/DH Curriculum

A comprehensive curriculum must integrate AI tools across various stages of learning, adhering to Bloom's Taxonomy (Remembering, Understanding, Applying, Analyzing, Creating, Evaluating).

StageFocus & Bloom's LevelKey Content & ActivitiesTools/Frameworks
1. Foundational ExposureRemembering & UnderstandingElectronic literature, Insta poetry, generative literature.Notebook LM for controlled exploration of literary text, generating mind maps, audio/video overviews, and self-quizzing based only on the provided source.
2. Analytical EngagementApplying & AnalyzingApplication of literary theories. Students should have conversations with dead writers (e.g., Shakespeare) or characters (e.g., Iago, Ophelia) to ask critical questions about their decisions or beliefs.Peter Barry's Beginning Theory ("What do critics do" model).
3. Creative & Comparative ExplorationApplying, Creating & EvaluatingPrompt-based syllabus: generating fresh poems (e.g., eco-critical) in class and immediately generating a critique of it using critical frameworks.Todd Pressner's approach to comparative literature and DH.
4. Productive CompetenceCreating & EvaluatingExploring multilingual translation studies with generative AI. Focus on self-improvement of essay-type writings. Students submit handwritten answers, which are then evaluated by AI.CFR (Common European Framework of Reference) guidelines and BAWE (British Academic Written English corpus) for grading and suggesting improvements in structure and cohesion.
5. Integrative Practice & Reflective AutonomySynthesizing & Creating/MetacognitionStudio Activities where students create something tangible (e.g., short video essays, podcasts, blogs). Self-assessment and self-learning using AI as a personalized tutor.Google Classroom, YouTube, AI tutors.

Curriculum Outcomes

Using a detailed prompt incorporating this pedagogical hierarchy, AI tools can generate a comprehensive, structured curriculum. The resulting curriculum included:

  • Specific student work that requires both digital skills and physical handwriting (e.g., handwritten analysis of an insta poem vs. a canonical poem).
  • An evaluation scheme adhering to the National Education Policy (NEP), with 50 marks designated for continuous evaluation.
  • A curated reading list featuring seminal authors in DH (Katherine Hayles, Franco Moretti) and contemporary works (Rupi Kaur’s Milk and Honey for Insta poetry).

The Emotional and Cognitive Impact of AI

While AI primarily addresses the cognitive aspect of learning, it also has a profound emotional appeal and impact. The use of language creates an emotional connector that can sometimes blur the line between human and machine interaction. Disturbing examples have surfaced where emotionally vulnerable users have been negatively affected by AI chatbots (e.g., leading to self-harm or divorce).

Ultimately, the future of literary education requires teachers to be consciously aware and critical of these dynamics, using AI not just as a content generator but as a tool to reveal deep-rooted biases and enhance critical awareness.

Saturday, 23 August 2025

Transformative Role of Universities in a Changing World

 The Transformative Role of Universities in a Changing World



This blog is on an orientation address (24 July 2025) by Prof. Dilip Barad for new university students, highlighting the transformative period in education driven by global technological advancements like generative AI and national policy changes such as the National Education Policy. It outlines the historical evolution of universities, tracing their roots from ancient gurukuls and academies to the establishment of the modern university system in the 11th-12th centuries, particularly the University of Bologna. The address then explains the three core principles of a university as enshrined in the 1988 Magna Carta Universitatum: academic freedom in research and teaching, the inseparable link between teaching and research, and the university as a centre for free inquiry and dialogue. Finally, it stresses the importance of evolving teaching methods as students progress to postgraduate studies and introduces new digital resources and platforms, like online e-libraries and the "One Nation One Subscription" scheme, to enhance the quality of research and learning, particularly overcoming language barriers with AI translation tools.

The speech in Hindi can be listened here:





AI-generated video summary:

This Hindi speech was uploaded on Google AI tool notebooklm. This AI tool generated this 5-minute video summary from this 14-minute speech:




AI-generated text summary:

Navigating the Tides of Change: Your University Journey in the 21st Century
Good morning to all students, faculty, and dignitaries! We stand at a pivotal moment, a "very good morning" indeed, as we embark on a discussion about the university's crucial role in education. The world, our nation, and even our state are experiencing a powerful "wind of change".

A World in Flux: Embracing Paradox
Globally, we are witnessing the climax of technological innovation, particularly with Generative AI and Artificial Intelligence. The speaker ponders how this will reshape our education and lives – whether it will "disrupt, destroy, or give a good shape" to them remains to be seen. Nationally, we are in the fifth year of implementing the National Education Policy (NEP), grappling with its spirit and application across all levels of education. At the state level, new Common Acts and Statutes for Public Universities are bringing their own set of challenges and experiences.
This era of profound change echoes the sentiments of great literary figures. Like Wordsworth's reflections on the French Revolution – "to be alive in that dawn was bliss, but to be young was heaven" – we find ourselves in an exhilarating, yet uncertain, time. Charles Dickens' opening lines from A Tale of Two Cities perfectly summarize our current state:
• "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times..."
• "It was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness..."
• "It was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness..."
We truly have "everything before us, we had nothing before us". In this paradoxical landscape, understanding the essence of a university is more vital than ever.

The Enduring Spirit of Universities: From Ancient Gurukuls to Modern Academia
The concept of organized learning is ancient, with the Gurukul system in India and Plato's Academy and Aristotle's Lyceum in Greece. Later, institutions like Nalanda, Taxila, and Vallabhi Universities flourished in India, primarily focusing on Buddhist philosophy, alongside mathematics and science.
However, the modern university as we know it emerged in the 11th and 12th centuries with the founding of the University of Bologna in Italy. A critical development in the mid-12th century (1155-88) was the inclusion of Academic Freedom in its charter.
Fast forward to 1988; to celebrate Bologna's 900th anniversary, the Magna Carta Universitatum was adopted. This charter reaffirms the fundamental values of a university. Many prestigious Indian universities, including Banaras Hindu University, JNU, University of Kolkata, University of Delhi, University of Mumbai, Visva-Bharati, Anna University, Kurukshetra University, and Punjab University, along with Gujarat's Maharaja Sayajirao University, have signed this Magna Carta.
The Magna Carta Universitatum outlines three core principles that should guide every university:
1. Freedom: Research and teaching must be intellectually and morally independent of political influence and economic interests.
2. Inseparable Link between Teaching and Research: These two aspects cannot be separated. Students are encouraged to become active participants in the pursuit and deepening of knowledge. When you join a university after graduation, you transcend being merely a "student" to become a "scholar," actively engaging in research.
3. Centre for Free Inquiry and Dialogue: Universities are places for open investigation and debate, characterized by a spirit of openness to dialogue and a rejection of intolerance.
These three principles form the enduring vision of a university that we strive to uphold.

The NEP's Vision: Evolving Teachers for Evolving Minds
The National Education Policy (NEP) is designed with a specific "spirit" in mind: teachers should change as students progress through different educational stages. This is because teachers develop a specific mindset tailored to the age group they teach. Just as a primary school teacher might not be suitable for high school, or an 11th/12th-grade teacher for a college, the NEP advocates for a change in teachers when students move from undergraduate to postgraduate and research (PhD) programmes.
This transition is crucial because at the postgraduate and research levels, students are expected to become scholars, embracing both research and teaching simultaneously. If teachers remain the same, students might not be able to develop new perspectives or break free from undergraduate learning patterns. The university's postgraduate and PhD programmes are the "peak of the pyramid" in our education system, a place for advanced learning and scholarly pursuit.

Unlocking Knowledge in the Digital Age: Resources at Your Fingertips
While we acknowledge potential limitations in infrastructure or the need for international-level facilities, the current global technological era is opening new doors, particularly through online and virtual platforms. Your university is committed to providing access to unparalleled resources:
• Online E-Library Access: If you've opened a library account, you should have received an email granting access to the university's online e-library application. This platform provides free access to thousands of articles from JSTOR journals, a subscription that is otherwise very costly for individuals and even institutions. The aim is to encourage you to rely on quality journal articles over guidebooks or "cheap study material".
• Breaking Language Barriers with Generative AI: For those who find English a barrier, the excuse is now obsolete. Generative AI (like ChatGPT or Gemini) can instantly translate any English article into Gujarati (or other languages) within minutes. This advanced machine translation is far superior to older versions, eliminating linguistic limitations in your pursuit of knowledge.
• One Nation One Subscription (ONeS): Beyond what the university subscribes to, the Indian government has launched the ONeS.gov.in scheme. This initiative provides free access to a vast array of high-quality journals. To access this, you must use the university's network—be it in the library or your department—ensuring you utilize this quality material for your teaching and research.
In choosing this university, you have made a significant decision, and we are grateful for your trust. We are committed to making your two-year journey excellent, filled with quality education, research opportunities, and lifelong memories.

Thank you, and welcome to this exciting phase of your academic life!



AI-generated mind map:



Monday, 19 May 2025

AI Generated Podcast on NAAC

Experimenting with AI Tools for Academic Communication: 

Podcast on NAAC’s New Accreditation System



As part of my ongoing engagement with AI tools for educational innovation, I recently explored a new workflow to create and publish a podcast-based explainer on the National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC)’s proposed new accreditation system. This initiative aligns with the growing need to simplify complex policy documents and reforms for a wider academic audience.

To create the content, I used Google NotebookLMa powerful AI-powered note-taking and summarization tool. By uploading relevant documents and reports about the proposed changes in NAAC's accreditation framework, I was able to prompt NotebookLM to generate a clear, structured podcast script. The tool’s capacity to synthesize technical information into coherent narrative form made it especially effective for this task.

Once the podcast script was finalized and recorded, I turned to Audiograman AI platform that converts audio content into engaging, captioned videos optimized for social media and video-sharing platforms. This step allowed me to create a visually enriched, accessible version of the podcast suitable for YouTube publication, complete with on-screen captions for better comprehension and outreach.

In this blog post, I am pleased to share the captioned video podcast, which provides an overview of NAAC’s proposed changes, potential implications for higher education institutions, and the broader context of accreditation reform in India.

🎥 Watch the Video Podcast Here:

 [Link of YouTube video]

This experiment highlights how AI tools can significantly streamline the process of content creation, curation, and dissemination — especially for educators and administrators navigating evolving academic landscapes.

I invite you to watch the video, share your feedback, and reflect on how such tools might be integrated into your own teaching, training, or institutional development efforts.