Baer (2025) Investigating the “Feeling Rules” of Generative AI and Imagining Alternative Futures | In the Library with the Lead Pipe
flavoursofopenscience's bookmarks 2025-07-18
Summary:
by Andrea Baer
Since the public debut of ChatGPT in November 2022, the calls for librarians to adopt and promote generative AI (GenAI) technologies and to teach “AI literacy” have become part of everyday work life. For instruction librarians with reservations about encouraging widespread GenAI use, these calls have become harder to sidestep as GenAI technologies are rapidly integrated into search tools of all types, including those that libraries pay to access. In this article, I explore the dissonance between, on the one hand, instruction librarians’ pedagogical goals and professional values and, on the other, the capacities, limitations, and costs of GenAI tools. Examining discourse on GenAI and AI literacy, I pay particular attention to messages we hear about the appropriate ways to think and feel about GenAI. These “feeling rules” often stand in the way of honest and constructive dialogue and collective decision making. Ultimately, I consider work from within and outside librarianship that offers another view: that we can slow down, look honestly at GenAI capacities and harms, take seriously the choice some librarians may make to limit their GenAI use, and collectively explore the kinds of futures we want for our libraries, our students, fellow educators, and ourselves.