Back to Articles
UNSW Enhances AI Capabilities with ChatGPT Pilot Program

iTnews

SKIPPED

Details

Date Published
19 Dec 2024
Priority Score
3
Australian
Yes
Created
8 Mar 2025, 02:41 pm

Authors (1)

Description

Will determine future ecosystem integration.

Summary

The University of New South Wales (UNSW) is conducting a 12-month trial of ChatGPT, in collaboration with OpenAI, to integrate AI tools into its educational ecosystem. The initiative aims to enhance the digital literacy and educational experience of staff and students, while contributing to research advancements. By using ChatGPT and other AI technologies like Microsoft's Copilot, UNSW seeks to foster creativity, efficiency, and collaboration across the university. The outcome of this pilot will determine how UNSW can effectively and ethically use generative AI in higher education, potentially influencing AI policy and safety considerations in Australia.

Body

UNSW is exploring how to integrate ChatGPT into its digital ecosystem through a 12-month pilot. The university has rolled out the large language model’s education tool, ChatGPT Edu, to 500 trial participants, after partnering with OpenAI. ChatGPT will be used alongside other AI tools, including Microsoft’s Copilot, in a bid to “lift its UNSW-wide AI capability”. “[The trial] means students and staff can test and learn with all the benefits of the GPT engine, in a controlled environment, allowing us to experiment, learn and determine how best to integrate it into our ecosystem,” a UNSW spokesperson told iTnews. “The outcome of the pilot will inform our next steps. "Different LLMs and other AI tools support different use cases across the university. "Based upon the outcomes of the pilots underway, various models and tools will be selected to meet the outcomes we seek.” The university hopes ChatGPT will improve “educational experience and digital literacy for staff and students by providing AI tools that enable creativity, efficiency, and collaboration”. It also expects the tool to “advance” researchers’ work, alongside providing “effective and ethical” applications of generative AI in higher education. The pilot may also develop students’ AI capabilities that they “will need in the workforce”. Writing on LinkedIn earlier this week, UNSW CIO Chrissy Burns said the partnership with OpenAI "builds on our existing work to realise the benefits of AI to deliver innovation in research and teaching and give time back to our staff in a safe and reliable way”. “The arrangement will allow UNSW researchers, educators, students and staff to harness OpenAI’s tools on a secure platform – supporting protection of IP and data while using Open AI to complement and enhance their work,” she wrote.