The second team, Abraham Lozano Serna, Alex Ababu, Mariam Serghat and Mudi Erhueh, presented SparkPack, an AI tool that connects with Canvas, a cloud-based learning management system, to help students organize study materials and identify learning gaps before exams.
“The great thing about SparkPack is it is structured, student-specific and can be personalized,” Serghat said.
Prior to the April 30 event, the student teams honed their pitches with experts from AI Acceleration, using available resources, mentorship and opportunities to push their ideas forward. “The leadership at Enterprise Technology really came through for us,” Murungi said. “We were coached on how to identify and understand our users, pitch our solution and present our value proposition. Having someone guide us through that process has been super amazing.”
The AI Acceleration Student Innovation Challenge was kicked off with ideation presentations on January 16, inspiring connection and creativity in students who shared early AI-powered concepts. Over the next several weeks, student teams continued to refine their concepts into prototypes before pitching their projects to Gonick for consideration to move into production.
“This is a chance for us to amplify these two fabulous student projects,” Gonick said. “We will work with the students to find ways to productize and scale their solutions and bring them to market. Our CreateAI environment is a robust marketplace for students, faculty and staff to share their AI projects across the ASU community.”