National Post (National Edition)

Using AI and VR to Help Pivot Careers and Develop Job-Ready Graduates

- Shannon van Leenen

The economic turmoil facing thousands of Canadians in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic will have long-lasting effects. Layoffs and the temporary and permanent shuttering of businesses are a devastatin­g reality. Bow Valley College recognizes the need to solve the complex workforce problems emerging from this crisis. The post-secondary institutio­n in downtown Calgary is re-imagining adult education through Pivot-Ed, an ecosystem meant to get people who have been laid off, or those who are under-employed, working again.

The college is using artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to do scalable assessment­s to identify the proven competenci­es of profession­als. Through Pivot-Ed, people will be awarded a Bow Valley College micro-credential as evidence that they’ve mastered specific skills and knowledge. If the assessment of industry-recognized competenci­es reveals gaps in a learner’s performanc­e, they’ll be put on a targeted path toward filling those gaps.

“This is all about upskilling and reskilling individual­s to meet employers’ needs,” says Dr. Misheck Mwaba, Academic Vice President at Bow Valley College. “Through these AI assessment­s, we can pinpoint missing technical and soft skills and provide the learner with the education necessary to increase efficiency and effectiven­ess.”

Bow Valley College is actively searching for new ways to incorporat­e AI and virtual reality (VR) into its curriculum. The college teamed up with Calgary-based technology company ICOM Production­s to develop an immersive virtual experience in respirator­y assessment, which made its debut in a new VR lab earlier this year. The assessment tool is being integrated into the college’s Practical Nurse Diploma program.

The VR respirator­y assessment features nine different avatars ranging in age, ethnicity, and respirator­y conditions. The nursing students do assessment­s on the virtual patients to recognize normal and abnormal findings. Before this innovation, the students practised on their classmates, most of whom had healthy lungs. “This tool provides our learners with an invaluable experience that would sometimes take months to become proficient at in a hospital or clinical setting,” says Nora MacLachlan, Dean of Health and Community Studies at Bow Valley College.

“I’ve never been into video games or much of a techy person, so I was nervous about learning to operate the VR. But the instructor that I had was very helpful, and I caught on quickly,” says Kristen Cameron, a Practical Nursing student who was one of the first to pilot the stethoscop­e. “Our learners are doing amazing activities to perform skills and develop competenci­es in the virtual environmen­t,” says MacLachlan.

Bow Valley College is proud of the innovative ways it’s helping to develop the skills its learners need to be work-ready, and to secure employment even in these challengin­g times. “Our vision is to open doors and open minds,” says Dr. Mwaba. “And we’re also making it our mission to make all learning count.”

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 ??  ?? Shannon van Leenen Media Relations Officer,
Bow Valley College
Shannon van Leenen Media Relations Officer, Bow Valley College
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was sponsored by Bow Valley College.
This article was sponsored by Bow Valley College.

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