EAAI-21: The 11th Symposium on Educational Advances in Artificial Intelligence
A Virtual Conference (Collocated with AAAI-21)
Feb. 6-7, 2021
Sponsored by the [Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence ](http://www.aaai.org/)
EAAI-21
Dates
- Abstract submission due: September 1, 2020 11:59pm UTC-12
- Paper submission deadline: September 9, 2020 11:59pm UTC-12
- Notification date: November 13, 2020
- Camera-ready copy due to AAAI: December 18, 2020
- Symposium dates: February 6-7, 2021
Program Schedule
Saturday, February 6, 2021
9:30am - 5:15pm EST
[9:30-10:45am] Talking to the Public about AI
Michael Wooldridge - University of Oxford and Alan Turing Institute, London
Since everything went crazy in AI, around 2012, I, like many other members of our community, have frequently found myself put in the position of having to talk about our field to a non-specialist audience. I've been interviewed on TV and radio, and spoken to endless university committees, government committees, and industrial conferences. More recently, following the publication of my two popular science books (the Ladybird Expert Guide to AI [2018], and The Road to Conscious Machines [2020]), I've even begun speaking at a literary festivals (believe me, I never expected to be doing this as a PhD student studying multiagent systems back in 1989). In this talk, I will relate these experiences, the mistakes I made, and what I learned from them – how our field is perceived, what people fear, hope, and expect from it, and how best to communicate excitement about the very real progress we've made recently with a realistic understanding of where we are and where we are going.
Michael Wooldridge is the winner of this year’s Outstanding Educator award. He is a Professor of Computer Science and Head of Department of Computer Science at the University of Oxford, and a programme director for AI at the Alan Turing Institute. He is a Fellow of the ACM, the Association for the Advancement of AI (AAAI), and the European Association for AI (EurAI). From 2014-16, he was President of the European Association for AI, and from 2015-17 he was President of the International Joint Conference on AI (IJCAI). As well as more than 400 technical articles on AI, he has published two popular science introductions to the field: The Ladybird Expert Guide to AI (2018), and The Road to Conscious Machines (Pelican, 2020).
[10:45 - 11:00] Welcome
Lisa Torrey - St. Lawrence University
Michael Guerzhoy - Princeton University
[11:00 - 11:45] Main Track
- Applied Machine Learning for Games: A Graduate School Course
Yilei Zeng, Aayush Shah, Jameson Thai, Michael Zyda
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-16.ZengY.pdf - Designing a Hybrid AI Residency
Felipe Leno Da Silva, Silvio Stanzani, Jefferson Coelho, Jorge Mondadori, Muriel Mazzetto, Felipe Sanches Couto, Raphael Cobe
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-42.SilvaFLD.pdf
[11:45 - 12:45] Main Track
- AI-Infused Collaborative Inquiry in Upper Elementary School: A Game-Based Learning Approach
Seung Lee, Bradford Mott, Anne Ottenbreit-Leftwich, Adam Scribner, Sandra Taylor, Kyungjin Park, Jonathan Rowe, Krista Glazewski, Cindy Hmelo-Silver, James Lester
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-26.LeeS.pdf - Introduction to Machine Learning with Robots and Playful Learning
Viktoriya Olari, Kostadin Cvejoski, Øyvind Eide
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-51.OlariV.pdf - Learning Artificial Intelligence: Insights into How Youth Encounter and Build Understanding of AI Concepts
Eric Greenwald, Maxyn Leitner, Ning Wang
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-78.GreenwaldE.pdf
[12:45 - 3:00] Gin Rummy Undergraduate Research Challenge
- Extracting Learned Discard and Knocking Strategies from a Gin Rummy Bot
Benjamin Goldstein, Jean Astudillo Guerra, Emily Haigh, Bryan Cruz Ulloa, Jeremy Blum
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-18.GoldsteinB.pdf - A Heuristic Evaluation Function for Hand Strength Estimation in Gin Rummy
Aqib Ahmed, Joshua Leppo, Michal Lesniewski, Riken Patel, Jonathan Perez, Jeremy Blum
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-21.AhmedA.pdf - Estimating Card Fitness for Discard in Gin Rummy
Jacob Gallucci, Sarah Kettell, Richard Bowser, Christian Overton
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-25.GallucciJ.pdf - A Deterministic Neural Network Approach to Playing Gin Rummy
Viet Dung Nguyen, Dung Doan, Todd Neller
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-94.NguyenVD.pdf - A Data-Driven Approach for Gin Rummy Hand Evaluation
Sang Truong, Todd Neller
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-92.TruongS.pdf - Opponent Hand Estimation in the Game of Gin Rummy
Peter Francis, Hoang Anh Just, Todd Neller
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-89.FrancisP.pdf - Knocking in the Game of Gin Rummy
Ryzeson Maravich, Taylor Neller, Todd Neller
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-91.MaravichR.pdf
[3:00 - 3:45] Main Track
- Visualizing NLP in Undergraduate Students' Learning about Natural Language
Cecilia Ovesdotter Alm, Alex Hedges
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-23.AlmCO.pdf - Deep Discourse Analysis for Generating Personalized Feedback in Intelligent Tutor Systems
Matt Grenander, Robert Belfer, Ekaterina Kochmar, Iulian Serban, François St-Hilaire, Jackie Cheung
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-68.GrenanderM.pdf
[3:45 - 4:30] Main Track
- Educational Question Mining At Scale: Prediction, Analysis and Personalization
Zichao Wang, Sebastian Tschiatschek, Simon Woodhead, Jose Miguel Hernandez Lobato, Simon Peyton Jones, Richard Baraniuk, Cheng Zhang
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-65.WangZ.pdf - Student Knowledge Prediction for Teacher-Student Interaction
Seonghun Kim, Woojin Kim, Yeonju Jang, Heeseok Jung, Seongyune Choi, Hyeoncheol Kim
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-85.KimS.pdf
[4:30 - 5:15] Main Track
- Why and What to Teach: AI Curriculum for Elementary School
Seonghun Kim, Yeonju Jang, Woojin Kim, Seongyune Choi, Heeseok Jung, Soohwan Kim, Hyeoncheol Kim
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-84.KimS.pdf - Teacher Perspectives on How To Train Your Robot: A Middle School AI and Ethics Curriculum
Randi Williams, Stephen Kaputsos, Cynthia Breazeal
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-43.WilliamsR.pdf
Sunday, February 7, 2021
10:00am - 6:00pm EST
[10:00 - 11:15] Teaching Online and Blended AI Courses
Ashok Goel - Georgia Institute of Technology
Ansaf Salleb-Aouissi - Columbia University
Mehran Sehami - Stanford University
This panel is composed of AI faculty with experience teaching online and blended classes. Many of us found ourselves teaching AI courses online for the first time last year, and even after COVID-19 subsides, higher education is likely to retain online components. How will we make the most of this challenge (and opportunity)? How do we engage and bond with students online? What are the best tools for AI courses? In a blended model, which components of a course can be done best online and which are best in person? Panelists will share what they’ve learned on these topics and more.
Ashok Goel is a Professor in the School of Interactive Computing at Georgia Institute of Technology and the Chief Scientist with Georgia Tech’s Center for 21st Century Universities. In 2014, he co-developed a Udacity course on Knowledge-Based AI; in 2016, his research laboratory developed Jill Watson, a virtual teaching assistant for automatically answering questions in online classes; and in 2019, he co-edited a volume on Blended Learning published by MIT Press. Ashok received AAAI’s Outstanding AI Educator Award in 2019, and the University System of Georgia’s Hall of Fame Faculty Award for Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in 2020.
Ansaf Salleb-Aouissi is a senior lecturer in computer science with specific interests in machine learning and AI applications, including education and healthcare. She has published in top quality venues including JMLR, TPAMI, AAAI, ECML, PKDD, COLT, IJCAI, ECAI, CHILL, and AISTAT. She also has a genuine interest in education and teaching, particularly on how to translate complex topics and break up abstract concepts into a form understandable and engaging to students. Recently, she has been working on building education tools for auto-grading and self-learning to provide additional support to her students in computer science and discrete mathematics. Her EdX course on Artificial Intelligence has attracted over a quarter million learners from all over the world since 2017.
Mehran Sahami is the James and Ellenor Chesebrough Professor in Engineering and Associate Chair for Education in the Computer Science department at Stanford University. He is also the Robert and Ruth Halperin University Fellow in Undergraduate Education. He served as co-chair of the ACM/IEEE-CS joint task force on Computer Science Curricula 2013, is Past Chair of the ACM Education Board, and was appointed by the Governor of California to the state's Computer Science Strategic Implementation Plan Advisory Panel.
[11:15 - 12:15] Demos, Software Tools, and Activities for Teaching AI in K-12
- Web-based Platform for K-12 AI Education in China
Chao Wu, Yan Li, Junxiang Li, Qiongdan Zhang, Fei Wu
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-47.WuC.pdf - PoseBlocks: A Toolkit for Creating (and Dancing) with AI
Brian Jordan, Nisha Devasia, Jenna Hong, Randi Williams, Cynthia Breazeal
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-71.JordanB.pdf - Teaching Tech to Talk: K-12 Conversational Artificial Intelligence Literacy Curriculum and Development Tools
Jessica Van Brummelen, Tommy Heng, Viktoriya Tabunshchyk
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-20.VanBrummelenJ.pdf
[12:15 - 1:15] Demos, Software Tools, and Activities for Teaching AI in K-12
- GANs Unplugged
Patrick Virtue
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-75.VirtueP.pdf - What are GANs?: Introducing Generative Adversarial Networks to Middle School Students
Daniella DiPaola, Safinah Ali, Cynthia Breazeal
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-41.AliS.pdf - The Contour to Classification game
Irene Lee, Safinah Ali
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-53.LeeI.pdf
[1:15 - 3:00] Gin Rummy Undergraduate Research Challenge
- Heisenbot: A Rule-Based Game Agent for Gin Rummy
Matthew Eicholtz, Savanna Moss, Matt Traino, Christian Roberson
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-66.EicholtzM.pdf - A Highly-Parameterized Ensemble to Play Gin Rummy
Masayuki Nagai, Kavya Shrivastava, Kien Ta, Steven Bogaerts, Chad Byers
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-37.NagaiM.pdf - Random Forests for Opponent Hand Estimation in Gin Rummy
Anthony Hein, May Jiang, Vydhourie Thiyageswaran, Michael Guerzhoy
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-6.HeinA.pdf - Evaluating Gin Rummy Hands Using Opponent Modeling and Myopic Meld Distance
Phoebe Goldman, Corey Knutson, Ryan Mahtab, Jack Maloney, Joseph Mueller, Richard Freedman
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-28.GoldmanP.pdf - Opponent Hand Estimation in Gin Rummy Using Deep Neural Networks and Heuristic Strategies
Bhaskar Mishra, Ashish Aggarwal
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-96.MishraB.pdf - Modeling Expert and Folk Knowledge in a Heuristic-Based Reflex Agent for Gin Rummy
Sarah Larkin, William Collicott, Jason Hiebel
https://www.aaai.org/AAAI21Papers/EAAI-67.LarkinS.pdf
[3:00 - 3:45] Model AI Assignments
- “Unplugged” Semantic Networks and Knowledge Representations
Duri Long, Jonathan Moon, Brian Magerko
http://modelai.gettysburg.edu/2021/semantic/ - Introducing AI Worksheet Activity
Duri Long, Jonathan Moon, Brian Magerko
http://modelai.gettysburg.edu/2021/intro/
[3:45 - 4:30] Model AI Assignments
- Rushhour: designing and comparing heuristics for a children's puzzle
John Maraist
http://modelai.gettysburg.edu/2021/rushhour/ - Using Markov Chain Text Generators to Facilitate Found Poetry Creation
Alex Leto, Toni Lefton, Tom Williams
http://modelai.gettysburg.edu/2021/poetry/
[4:30 - 5:15] Model AI Assignments
- ScalarFlow: Implementing Reverse Mode Automatic Differentiation
Nathan Sprague
http://modelai.gettysburg.edu/2021/scalarflow/ - Text Denoising Autoencoder for News Headlines
Lisa Zhang, Pouria Fewzee
http://modelai.gettysburg.edu/2021/headlines/
[5:15 - 6:00] Community Meeting
All attendees are invited to join us for an informal community meeting at the end of EAAI-21, where we'll socialize and share ideas for next year's symposium.
Submission
Main Track
The main track invites a broad range of papers on teaching AI and teaching with AI. Submissions may be framed as research papers or as experience reports. Potential topics include:
- The design of an AI curriculum, course, or module.
- The development or use of a tool or resource to teach AI.
- The impact of a pedagogical or mentoring technique on AI students.
- The use of AI to facilitate teaching or to enhance learning.
Special Track: Demos, Software Tools, and Activities for Teaching AI in K-12
Chairs: Dave Touretzky (Carnegie Mellon) and Christina Gardner-McCune (University of Florida)
This special track invites papers on the development and use of resources to support K-12 AI education. Examples include online demos, software tools, and structured activities. Our goal is to make resources available for K-12 teachers to use in the classroom to engage students in learning about AI technologies. Papers should include the following: description of the resource; target age group; setup and resources needed; AI concepts addressed; expected learning outcomes; and (if possible) implementation results. Online demos and software tools should be accompanied by brief video walk-throughs.
Special Track: Gin Rummy Undergraduate Research Challenge
Chair: Todd Neller (Gettysburg College)
This special track invites papers addressing the Gin Rummy Undergraduate Research Challenge (http://cs.gettysburg.edu/~tneller/games/ginrummy/eaai). The object of this challenge is to develop a competitive and efficient Gin Rummy player. The broader purpose of EAAI undergraduate research challenges is to encourage faculty-mentored undergraduate students to experience the full life-cycle of AI research.
Submissions should be framed as research papers, with at least one undergraduate author and at least one faculty author, reporting on a player that has been submitted to the tournament.
Special Track: Model AI Assignments Session
Chair: Todd Neller, Gettysburg College
This special track invites assignments for AI classes. Good assignments take a lot of work to design. If an assignment you have developed may be useful to other AI educators, this track provides an opportunity to share it. Model AI Assignments are kept in a public online archive.
This track has special submission instructions (http://modelai.gettysburg.edu).
Submission Content and Formatting
All submissions must be anonymous for double-blind review.
Except for Model AI Assignments, which have their own format, papers should be:
- Up to 7 pages long, plus up to 2 pages of references
- Per AAAI-21 style guidelines (https://aaai.org/Conferences/AAAI-21)
- Submitted via EasyChair (https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=eaai21)
EAAI-21 will not consider any paper that, at the time of submission, is under review for or has already been published or accepted for publication in a refereed journal or conference. Once submitted to EAAI-21, papers may not be submitted to another refereed journal or conference during the review period. These restrictions do not apply to unrefereed forums or workshops without archival proceedings.
Organizers
Program co-Chairs
-
Michael Guerzhoy Princeton University
http://guerzhoy.princeton.edu -
Lisa Torrey St. Lawrence University
http://myslu.stlawu.edu/~ltorrey/
Organizing Committee
- Nate Derbinsky, Northeastern University (n.derbinsky@northeastern.edu)
- Laura Brown, Michigan Technological University (lebrown@mtu.edu)
- Zachary Dodds, Harvey Mudd College (dodds@cs.hmc.edu)
- Susan Imberman, CUNY College of Staten Island (susan.imberman@csi.cuny.edu)
- Todd Neller, Gettysburg College (tneller@gettysburg.edu)
K12 Track Chairs
- Christina Gardner-McCune, University of Florida (gmccune@ufl.edu)
- Dave Touretzky, Carnegie Mellon University (dst@cs.cmu.edu)
Program Committee
- Adam Smith, UC Santa Cruz
- Alexis Cobo, Pine Crest School
- Alla Rozovskaya, City University of New York
- Ameet Soni, Swarthmore College
- Amelie Marian, Rutgers University
- Amos Azaria, Ariel University
- Ananya Christman, Middlebury College
- Andreas Martin, FHNW University of Applied Sciences and Arts
- Anna Rafferty, Carleton College
- Ansaf Salleb-Aouissi, Columbia University
- Ashish Aggarwal, University of Florida
- Bita Akram, North Carolina State University
- Brian O'Neill, Western New England University
- Cecilia Ovesdotter Alm, Rochester Institute of Technology
- Chris Brooks, University of San Francisco
- Claudio Gallicchio, University of Pisa
- Dave Kauchak, Pomona College
- David Lockett, ORAU/NASA
- David Poole, The University of British Columbia
- Debra Burhans, Canisius College
- Devika Subramanian, Rice University
- Doug Turnbull, Ithaca College
- Ehi Nosakhare, Microsoft
- Eric Eaton, University of Pennsylvania
- Erin Talvitie, Harvey Mudd College
- Felipe Leno da Silva, Advanced Institute for AI
- Francesca Spezzano, Boise State University
- Fredrik Heintz, Linköping University
- George Thomas, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
- Giulia Toti, University of Houston
- Giuseppe Carenini, The University of British Columbia
- Hadi Hosseini, Pennsylvania State University
- Haym Hirsh, Cornell University
- Hyeoncheol Kim, Korea University
- James Glenn, Yale University
- James Marshall, Sarah Lawrence College
- Jared Amalong, Sacramento County Office of Education
- Jason Hiebel, Michigan Technological University
- Jeffrey Pfaffmann, Lafayette College
- Jeremy Blum, Pennsylvania State University
- Jessie Walker, STEM Resources
- Jia Tao, Lafayette College
- Jim Boerkoel, Harvey Mudd College
- Jimmy Lee, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
- John Anderson, University of Manitoba
- John Chapin, Loudoun County Public Schools
- Joseph Osborn, Pomona College
- Joshua Eckroth, Stetson University
- Joyce Williams, National Geospatial Intelligence Agency
- Joydeep Biswas, University of Texas Austin
- Justin Li, Occidental College
- Kelly Powers, Cornell Tech
- Laney Strange, Northeastern University
- Lars Kotthoff, University of Wyoming
- Laura Brown, Michigan Technological University
- Lisa Meeden, Swarthmore College
- Lisa Zhang, University of Toronto
- Maria Gini, University of Minnesota
- Marie desJardins, Simmons University
- Mark Miller, Learningtech.org
- Matthew Eicholtz, Florida Southern College
- Matthew Taylor, Washington State University
- Mehran Sahami, Stanford University
- Mei Si, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
- Michael Wollowski, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology
- Nancy Green, University of North Carolina Greensboro
- Narges Norouzi, UC Santa Cruz
- Nate Derbinsky, Northeastern University
- Panagiotis Karras, Aarhus University
- Qian Yang, Duke University
- Radu Paul Mihail, Valdosta State University
- Raghuram Ramanujan, Davidson College
- Raja Sooriamurthi, Carnegie Mellon University
- Rajiv Ratn Shah, IIIT Delhi
- Rania Hodhod, Columbus State University
- Richard Freedman, Smart Information Flow Technologies
- Sameer Singh, University of California Irvine
- Sarah Zelikovitz, College of Staten Island
- Scott Alfeld, Amherst College
- Simon Parsons, University of Lincoln
- Stavroula Prantsoudi, Greek Public Schools
- Stephanie August, Loyola Marymount University
- Steven Bogaerts, DePauw University
- Susan Imberman, City University of New York
- Sven Koenig, University of Southern California
- Terry Zimmerman, University of Washington-Bothell
- Tom Williams, Colorado School of Mines
- Ute Schmid, University of Bamberg
- Uzay Macar, Columbia University
- Vibhu Mittal, Mettle Works/Edmodo
- Vincent Cicirello, Stockton University
- William Kerney, Clovis College
- Xiaoyan Li, Princeton University
- Yuanlin Zhang, Texas Tech University
- Zachary Dodds, Harvey Mudd College
- Zitao Liu, TAL Education Group
Other Links
The following links are to various material on AAAI-21 and EAAI-21.