Journal of
Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics
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ISSN: 1690-4524 (Online)


Peer Reviewed Journal via three different mandatory reviewing processes, since 2006, and, from September 2020, a fourth mandatory peer-editing has been added.

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Published by
The International Institute of Informatics and Cybernetics


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Academia.edu
(A Community of about 40.000.000 Academics)


Honorary Editorial Advisory Board's Chair
William Lesso (1931-2015)

Editor-in-Chief
Nagib C. Callaos


Sponsored by
The International Institute of
Informatics and Systemics

www.iiis.org
 

Editorial Advisory Board

Quality Assurance

Editors

Journal's Reviewers
Call for Special Articles
 

Description and Aims

Submission of Articles

Areas and Subareas

Information to Contributors

Editorial Peer Review Methodology

Integrating Reviewing Processes


Analogical and Logical Thinking – In the Context of Inter- or Trans-Disciplinary Communication and Real-Life Problems
Nagib Callaos, Jeremy Horne
(pages: 1-17)

Artificial Intelligence for Drone Swarms
Mohammad Ilyas
(pages: 18-22)

Brains, Minds, and Science: Digging Deeper
Maurício Vieira Kritz
(pages: 23-28)

Can AI Truly Understand Us? (The Challenge of Imitating Human Identity)
Jeremy Horne
(pages: 29-38)

Comparison of Three Methods to Generate Synthetic Datasets for Social Science
Li-jing Arthur Chang
(pages: 39-44)

Digital and Transformational Maturity: Key Factors for Effective Leadership in the Industry 4.0 Era
Pawel Poszytek
(pages: 45-48)

Does AI Represent Authentic Intelligence, or an Artificial Identity?
Jeremy Horne
(pages: 49-68)

Embracing Transdisciplinary Communication: Redefining Digital Education Through Multimodality, Postdigital Humanism and Generative AI
Rusudan Makhachashvili, Ivan Semenist
(pages: 69-76)

Engaged Immersive Learning: An Environment-Driven Framework for Higher Education Integrating Multi-Stakeholder Collaboration, Generative AI, and Practice-Based Assessment
Atsushi Yoshikawa
(pages: 77-94)

Focus On STEM at the Expense of Humanities: A Wrong Turn in Educational Systems
Kleanthis Kyriakidis
(pages: 95-101)

From Disciplinary Silos to Cyber-Transdisciplinary Networks: A Plural Epistemic Model for AGI-Era Knowledge Production
Cristo Leon, James Lipuma
(pages: 102-115)

Generative AI (Artificial Intelligence): What Is It? & What Are Its Inter- And Transdisciplinary Applications?
Richard S. Segall
(pages: 116-125)

How Does the CREL Framework Facilitate Effective Interdisciplinary Collaboration and Experiential Learning Through Role-Playing?
James Lipuma, Cristo Leon
(pages: 126-145)

Narwhals, Unicorns, and Big Tech's Messiah Complex: A Transdisciplinary Allegory for the Age of AI
Jasmin Cowin
(pages: 146-151)

Playing by Feel: Gender, Emotion, and Social Norms in Overwatch Role Choice
Cristo Leon, Angela Arroyo, James Lipuma
(pages: 152-163)

Responsible Integration of AI in Public Legal Education: Regulatory Challenges and Opportunities in Albania
Adrian Leka, Brunilda Haxhiu
(pages: 164-170)

The Civic Mission of Universities: Transdisciplinary Communication in Practice
Genejane Adarlo
(pages: 171-175)

The Promise and Peril of Artificial Intelligence in Higher Education
James Lipuma, Cristo Leon
(pages: 176-182)

They Learned the Course! Why Then Do They Come to Tutorials?
Russell Jay Hendel
(pages: 183-187)

To Use or Not to Use Artificial Intelligence (AI) to Solve Terminology Issues?
Ekaterini Nikolarea
(pages: 188-195)

Transdisciplinary Supersymmetry: Generative AI in the Vector Space of Postdigital Humanism
Rusudan Makhachashvili, Ivan Semenist
(pages: 196-204)

Why Is Trans-Disciplinarity So Difficult?
Ekaterini Nikolarea
(pages: 205-207)


 

Abstracts

 


ABSTRACT


Engaged Immersive Learning: An Environment-Driven Framework for Higher Education Integrating Multi-Stakeholder Collaboration, Generative AI, and Practice-Based Assessment

Atsushi Yoshikawa


This paper proposes Engaged Immersive Learning (EIL), a new framework designed to address the passivity, lack of context, and one-way communication that often characterize lecture centered higher education. The argument begins by examining the contributions and limitations of Problem/Project Based Learning (PBL) and STEM/STEAM education. While these approaches have enhanced self directed learning and creativity through problem based inquiry and interdisciplinary collaboration, they retain structural challenges: tasks are frequently designed within the classroom, activities tend to remain short lived, assessment relies on faculty defined institutional standards, and multi stakeholder collaboration often remains superficial. Drawing on Kolb’s experiential learning, Mezirow’s transformative learning, Akpan’s social constructivism, and Lave and Wenger’s concepts of Legitimate Peripheral Participation (LPP) and Communities of Practice (CoP), the study proposes design principles for EIL. It further introduces Generative AI (GenAI) as a catalyst that supports, rather than replaces, human collaboration. EIL consists of four elements: (1) an environment driven learning space in which students are immersed for extended periods in real world contexts where multiple stakeholders (e.g., corporations, government, citizens) interact; (2) a participation trajectory in which students’ roles and responsibilities expand gradually in line with LPP; (3) a dialogue design that positions GenAI as a “buddy” that sometimes errs but offers heterogeneous perspectives; and (4) practice based assessment structured around external outcomes, stakeholder perspectives, and transformative change. Case studies from a single university illustrate that EIL can generate outcomes beyond the classroom—such as international conference presentations and forms of societal implementation—enabling employers and public officials to evaluate students in terms of “would I want to work with this person?”, and treat identity shifts as explicit learning outcomes. The paper also identifies remaining challenges concerning sample size and duration, the reliability and validity of assessment rubrics, equity of access, ethics and governance in GenAI integration, and the tension between scalability and faculty workload. EIL is therefore positioned not as a finished model but as a set of design principles to be adapted to the specific contexts of different universities and regions.

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