13.01.2023 – 27.01.2023, NTNU Trondheim, Norway
Course teacher (village supervisor): Sofia Papavlasopoulou
Course code: TDT4850
This was the second time we run design activities with students to establish new knowledge about the use of AI applications in public administration in Norway, focusing on the users´ need to understand the role of AI in welfare delivery processes, their key characteristics and the types of data they use, leading the way in developing human-friendly and trustworthy solutions. Participants worked alongside researchers from the AI4users project from both University of Agder (UiA) and NTNU. The purpose of this partnership was to provide participants with relevant insights, facilitate meaningful discussion, and evaluate proposed measures addressing specific challenges related to the responsible use of AI in delivering welfare services.
EiT is an obligatory course for study programmes at the master’s level at NTNU. In this course, students from different study programs come together to solve real challenges through collaboration, reflection, and shared responsibility. It works by placing diverse groups in interdisciplinary villages, where they explore problems, develop ideas, and practice communication, trust building, and constructive conflict resolution. This takes place through written and oral reflections, and structured teamwork exercises. Through this process students discover how their individual strengths become far more powerful when combined with the perspectives of others, and they learn what effective teamwork truly means in practice. The teaching takes place in courses (villages) wich each have a different focus and challenges.
Read more about EiT on NTNU´s website.
Examples of challenges:
– Developing methods for identifying the needs of different groups of citizens and caseworkers.
– Creating solution ideas or prototypes that visualize information in an understandable way.
– Evaluating alternative visualizations and their impact on decision-making processes or public acceptance.
– Increasing the efficiency of decision processes without compromising transparency.
– Respecting legal requirements while building trust in both the systems and the caseworkers who use them.
Timeline
