The Age of AI: How to Make Artificial Intelligence Your Efficiency Assistant - The 2024 Undergraduate Theme of the College of Ocean Science and Engineering is called late

Date:2025-04-14Views:10


In order to help students better understand the application of artificial intelligence in learning and life, and improve information literacy and digital skills, on the evening of April 13, 2025, the 2024 undergraduate students of the School of Marine Science and Engineering had a successful roll call on the theme of AI Era: How to Make Artificial Intelligence Your Efficiency Assistant.

At the beginning of the activity, Mr. Ping Huan briefly introduced the basic concept of artificial intelligence and its current development status, helping students establish an overall understanding of AI technology. Then, he explained the skills of prompt word design in simple terms around the practical application of AI text generation, and provided a practical methodology for students to use AI tools in the future. Subsequently, Mr. Ping also showed the students the basic operations and creative ideas of AI image generation, which stimulated everyone's strong interest. In the interactive session, the students participated one after another, and by entering different keywords, they cooperated with the Haida Super Intelligence to generate a promotional poster of Shanghai Maritime University, which was full of creativity and highlights, and the response was enthusiastic.

The content of this evening roll call activity was rich and the form was novel, which greatly stimulated the students' curiosity and desire to explore artificial intelligence technology. In the future, the college will continue to carry out more theme activities that are close to the needs of students and focus on cutting-edge development, so as to help students comprehensively improve their digital literacy and innovation capabilities.

Written by: Gao Xuan

Source: College of Ocean Science and Engineering

Figure 1 Late roll call for the 2024 undergraduate students in the College of Ocean Science and Engineering