AI-Powered Role-Play in Higher Education: Extending Practice Beyond the Classroom

Start Date

November 2025

End Date

November 2025

Abstract

Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Large Language Models (LLMs) are rapidly reshaping the landscape of higher education, offering new opportunities to enhance teaching, learning, and professional training. This session highlights findings from an exploratory study that investigated the use of AI-powered role-play in graduate psychology education. In the study, 24 graduate students engaged in simulated diagnostic interviews with an AI-generated caregiver profile and received both immediate AI feedback and traditional faculty evaluation. Results demonstrated statistically significant increases in student support for the use of AI in higher education after participation. Students reported that AI feedback was highly detailed and structured, complementing, but not replacing, the mentorship and expertise of faculty.

This session will engage participants in exploring how AI can supplement faculty instruction by extending practice opportunities, supporting deliberate skill development, and offering individualized feedback at scale. At the same time, attention will be given to limitations and challenges identified by students, including technical reliability, authenticity of the simulation, and ethical considerations related to training future professionals.

The intended audience includes faculty, instructional designers, and academic leaders interested in innovative, research-informed strategies for integrating AI into graduate and professional education.

Learning Outcomes

  • Describe how AI-powered role-play can be used to strengthen graduate student interviewing and communication skills.

  • Analyze student perceptions of AI-generated feedback compared to faculty evaluation in higher education settings.

  • Apply evidence-based strategies to integrate AI tools as supplements to faculty instruction in professional training.

  • Evaluate potential challenges, including ethical, technical, and pedagogical concerns, when adopting AI in teaching.

  • Design approaches for balancing faculty mentorship with AI-enhanced practice opportunities to maximize student learning.

Track

Teaching & Learning Technologies

Session Type

25-Minute Session

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Nov 5th, 4:00 PM Nov 5th, 4:25 PM

AI-Powered Role-Play in Higher Education: Extending Practice Beyond the Classroom

Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Large Language Models (LLMs) are rapidly reshaping the landscape of higher education, offering new opportunities to enhance teaching, learning, and professional training. This session highlights findings from an exploratory study that investigated the use of AI-powered role-play in graduate psychology education. In the study, 24 graduate students engaged in simulated diagnostic interviews with an AI-generated caregiver profile and received both immediate AI feedback and traditional faculty evaluation. Results demonstrated statistically significant increases in student support for the use of AI in higher education after participation. Students reported that AI feedback was highly detailed and structured, complementing, but not replacing, the mentorship and expertise of faculty.

This session will engage participants in exploring how AI can supplement faculty instruction by extending practice opportunities, supporting deliberate skill development, and offering individualized feedback at scale. At the same time, attention will be given to limitations and challenges identified by students, including technical reliability, authenticity of the simulation, and ethical considerations related to training future professionals.

The intended audience includes faculty, instructional designers, and academic leaders interested in innovative, research-informed strategies for integrating AI into graduate and professional education.