研究者業績

大橋 ルイーズ

Louise Ohashi

基本情報

所属
学習院大学 英語英米文化学科 教授

ORCID ID
 https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0218-7385
J-GLOBAL ID
201601020690238602
researchmap会員ID
7000016485

論文

 32
  • Louise Ohashi
    ALLiED 1(2) 55-86 2025年12月22日  査読有り筆頭著者
    Teachers globally recognise the potential of artificial intelligence (AI) to aid and disrupt language learning, but there is a lack of up-to-date practiced-based research within L2 education due to AI’s rapid evolution. Despite the need for such research, few teachers are ready to empirically evaluate the impact of their interventions through pre- and post-intervention data collection, limiting the publication of practice-based studies. A partial solution lies in exploratory action research (AR), which prefaces the conventional AR ‘reflect-plan-act-observe’ cycle (Kemmis/McTaggart 1988) with a period of reflection, planning, and observation to identify problems without impacting everyday teaching (Smith 2015). This article presents an exploratory AR project on a university course designed to help students build AI literacy in order to critically and creatively use AI for L2 learning. The stages presented are course design (reflection and planning), course implementation (observation and reflection), and post-course identification of issues to address in future planning (reflection for future course design). Thus, the present study ends at the beginning of the conventional AR cycle. The article makes a valuable contribution by demonstrating how emerging technologies in L2 education can be explored through exploratory AR and offers practice-related findings that may help educators design activities and courses suited to their own contexts.
  • Louise Ohashi, Philip Hubbard
    Artificial Intelligence in Our Language Learning Classrooms 100-125 2025年11月22日  筆頭著者
    The recent proliferation of generative AI (GenAI) applications and the sharp rise in their language capabilities have led to widespread experimentation and adoption within language education. As empirical studies in this book demonstrate, GenAI has the potential to aid L2 teachers and students, but caution must be exerted to ensure it is used in appropriate ways. In this chapter, we explore GenAI ethics with the goal of steering teachers towards responsible use of this valuable educational tool. We not only identify potential problems, but also suggest ways to mitigate them. First, we discuss academic misuse of GenAI by students, including cheating and over-reliance, and consider the importance of guidelines and teacher modeling. Second, we look at issues surrounding privacy and data protection, highlighting risks and raising awareness about responsible use and consent. Next, we turn to the built-in biases in GenAI, providing suggestions to reduce the perpetuation of stereotypes and address disparities in the representation of different demographic groups. Then, we draw attention to the environmental impact of GenAI and highlight factors that should be considered for sustainable use. Finally, we consolidate these issues to offer seven emerging principles for teachers to consider when adopting GenAI into language education. Importantly, this chapter also provides guidance for teacher educators and institutions. It emphasizes their co-responsibility with teachers for the necessary initial upskilling in GenAI and GenAI ethics, as well as for teachers’ continuous professional development with this rapidly changing technology.
  • Louise Ohashi
    Artificial Intelligence in Our Language Learning Classrooms 14-17 2025年11月22日  
    In this introductory chapter, Louise Ohashi situates the emergence of generative AI (GenAI) in language education within a rapidly changing technological and pedagogical landscape. Reflecting on her experience as Chair of EUROCALL’s AI SIG during the release of ChatGPT, she documents the swift adoption of AI tools among L2 educators worldwide and their transformative potential for teaching and learning. The chapter explores both the opportunities and challenges of integrating GenAI into language education, highlighting its multimodal and multilingual affordances while urging critical, ethical, and informed use. It sets the stage for the book’s exploration of how AI is reshaping L2 skill development, ethics, engagement, and teacher practice.
  • Louise Ohashi, Suwako Uehara
    Proceedings of the International CALL Research Conference 2025年9月30日  査読有り筆頭著者
  • Louise Ohashi
    Insights into AI and Language Teaching and Learning 2025年  
    <jats:p>This chapter explores the adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) within language education from the perspective of teacher-driven action. It draws on the Community of Practice framework (Lave &amp; Wenger, 1991) to highlight the vital role of teacher communities in raising teachers’ AI literacy and facilitating AI integration. This framework comprises three central elements: the domain, the community, and the practice. The chapter outlines key issues within the domain of AI in language education, introduces various types of teacher communities that address this domain, and shares common practices they undertake. The chapter also integrates personal narratives and encourages readers to reflect on their own roles within teacher communities. It ends with a call to action, with suggestions for readers at all stages of the AI novice-expert spectrum.</jats:p>

MISC

 2

書籍等出版物

 4

講演・口頭発表等

 101

主要な学術貢献活動

 11

メディア報道

 5

その他

 2