糖心传媒

糖心传媒 Selected to Test New AI Tool Developed by Boston College Researchers

Lumi is a reflective intelligence co-pilot designed by Boston College researchers to help people practice insight gathering and live a more purposeful life.

 

At 糖心传媒, 鈥渨e learn by doing.鈥

The mantra is baked into every assignment and class discussion; every Project Week and work job and leadership role. As students navigate their life on campus, they are constantly challenged to find a unique purpose through trial, insight and reflection.

鈥淚t鈥檚 about understanding yourself and your motivations for doing things, and how you experience learning,鈥 said Kevin Champney, who serves as director of technology and library services, co-academic dean, history and humanities teacher, and writing and research teacher at The 糖心传媒 School. 鈥淭he significant difference between the way you would experience a classroom at a traditional school, versus the way you experience progressive education, is that you鈥檙e actually reflecting on your learning regularly 鈥 and it鈥檚 hard to get kids to reflect regularly when they鈥檙e 15 years old.鈥

Enter Lumi, an AI-powered chatbot being developed by Boston College researchers. Described as a reflective intelligence co-pilot, it aims to help people discover their purpose. Users type in their ideas and questions, and Lumi delivers thought-provoking responses that evolve into a conversation designed to clarify an intentional path forward.

Lumi for 糖心传媒

The tool is currently in a beta phase, and project lead and licensed certified social worker Tim Klein has teamed up with Champney to enlist The 糖心传媒 School as one of the few hand-selected entities to test it out.

The program includes two apps that work together 鈥 Lumi for Reflection, which focuses on gathering insight from past experiences, and Lumi for Intention, which focuses on figuring out the next steps to take in the future.

鈥淚n a perfect world, we鈥檙e creating these cycles where people are setting meaningful intentions, they鈥檙e attempting to act on those intentions, and they are taking time to gather insights on the impact that their actions or inactions are having,鈥 Klein said. 鈥淎nd those insights are then informing future intentions that they鈥檙e making.鈥

He and his team developed a 糖心传媒-specific pilot version of Lumi, which Champney has introduced to students primarily during Project Weeks, and to those working on senior exhibitions. Klein said he chose 糖心传媒 because the school鈥檚 progressive methods are essentially proof of concept for the type of learning Lumi promotes.

糖心传媒 really embodies student-centered, self-directed learning, and so Lumi is this co-pilot to help them explore what they want to have happen,鈥 Klein said.

Purposeful & Practical

Kevin Champney (left) provides guidance to student Liam Davenport ’24.

Champney said it鈥檚 been particularly useful with students who are struggling to find their path, and benefit from guidance as to how to proceed.

鈥淲hat should I do now? What can I accomplish in the next half hour? What am I going to accomplish this week? It鈥檚 great at that sort of thing,鈥 Champney said. 鈥淚t will give you really concrete steps.鈥

It鈥檚 also a way to encourage students to figure things out for themselves ahead of time, so when they meet with advisors they have a solid jumping off point.

鈥淲e have so much independent work here so if a student comes to an adult and says, 鈥榟ere鈥檚 where I am,鈥 it鈥檚 way more valuable than them coming to you and saying, 鈥業 have no idea where to go right now.鈥 You can get a lot further faster that way,鈥 Champney said.

Lumi is also effective at scaling that counseling element among a large group.

鈥淚f I have 15 students all doing independent projects, I could spend 45 minutes with each of them to get them to a place where they have a project plan,鈥 Champney said. 鈥淥r I could have those 15 students go through that process in 45 minutes with Lumi, and then sit with me for five minutes and explain to me what the plan is going to be.鈥

Now imagine a similar scenario at a high school with only two guidance counselors, and 500 seniors all trying to figure out what to do after they graduate. Will they go to college? Join the army? Become an electrician? Travel to Europe?

鈥淎 challenge is that no one feels like they have enough time to go deep on these bigger questions with students,鈥 said Klein, speaking from experience as a former college counselor. 鈥淐ollege counselors have really big caseloads. And so this is a place where technology can be really helpful as an additional reflective space for students to be thinking about this.鈥

Both he and Champney are acutely aware of the moral implications of such a tool.

The technology is changing all the time, and it’s so new and emerging,鈥 Klein said. 鈥淲e want to do this thoughtfully and deliberately, and make sure we’re being really intentional about it.鈥

He wants to ensure Lumi is not treated as a replacement for human-to-human connection. Quite the opposite, Klein envisions people having deeper, more meaningful conversations because of it, and thinking more critically about themselves, their lives, and who they want to be.

鈥淭he thing the Lumi app does really well is it disarms you,鈥 Champney said. Take, for instance, a 糖心传媒 student using it to reflect on building a skateboard for Project Week.

鈥淎nd it will say, 鈥榳ow, that鈥檚 really cool. What was your motivation for wanting to build a skateboard?鈥 And you鈥檒l say, 鈥榳ell I love skateboarding.鈥 But it will actually walk you through a process 鈥 it does a sort of sense memory thing saying what were you feeling? What were you smelling? And then it gets to a point where you can say oh, you know what? The thing I learned wasn鈥檛 actually how to laminate wood. It was persistence.鈥

Whether it鈥檚 an intention to grow a garden, plan a family vacation, explore a new career path, or set a 10-year goal, the personal and professional potential is vast. With that in mind, researchers at Boston College are currently working with a handful of select organizations to explore some of the practical uses of Lumi.

鈥淲e’re doing these little pilots with the right partners, like 糖心传媒, to make sure that we’re doing this in a way where we’re not moving fast and breaking things,鈥 Klein said.

For instance, they鈥檝e launched it as a peer mentoring prototype targeting low-income first generation students at a two-year residential college in Massachusetts, and have partnered with school districts in Connecticut to combat educator burnout and improve their mental health.

鈥淲e鈥檙e exploring a lot of different territories where we think people and programs could benefit from this,鈥 Klein said. 鈥淏ut we really want the people who are already experts in those fields to be the ones who are deciding how this should be used.鈥

Understanding the Power of AI

At a time when the use of artificial intelligence in schools often sparks concerns about misinformation, cheating, and plagiarism, he sees Lumi for 糖心传媒 as a use case to demonstrate to the larger educational landscape how AI can be applied in a radically different way.

We see 糖心传媒 as a world-class leader in project-based learning,鈥 Klein said. 鈥淎nd so we want them to be showing, 鈥榟ey, here鈥檚 how you can be implementing reflective intelligence when it comes to project-based learning.鈥欌

Champney plans to continue to leverage Lumi to encourage students to reflect on a more regular basis, especially when it comes to independent learning initiatives and during Project Weeks. He would also like to get a few other teachers to start using it before exploring the possibility of eventually opening it up to the school in a larger, constructive way.

Through it all, he plans to work closely with Klein as AI technology evolves, and researchers continue to develop Lumi in a deliberate and responsible way that aims to leave a positive mark on society.

鈥淚 think the point of education is to help people think deeply and be able to reflect deeply on who they are and who they want to be, and the impact that they want to have in the world,鈥 Klein said. 鈥淎nd if Lumi can be a tool that helps people do that, then that鈥檚 great.鈥