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Intergenerational AI Literacy in Korean Immigrant Families: Interpretive Gatekeeping Meets Convenient Critical Deferment

Published: June 11, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2506.10197v1

By: Jeongone Seo, Ryan Womack, Tawfiq Ammari

Potential Business Impact:

Families learn to use AI together.

Business Areas:
Natural Language Processing Artificial Intelligence, Data and Analytics, Software

As artificial intelligence (AI) becomes deeply integrated into family life, immigrant families must navigate unique intergenerational, linguistic, and cultural challenges. This study examines how Korean immigrant families in the United States negotiate the use of AI tools such as ChatGPT and smart assistants in their homes. Through 20 semi-structured interviews with parents and teens, we identify two key practices that shape their engagement: interpretive gatekeeping, where parents mediate their children's AI use through a lens of cultural and ethical values, and convenient critical deferment, where teens strategically postpone critical evaluation of AI for immediate academic and social utility. These intertwined practices challenge conventional, skills-based models of AI literacy, revealing it instead as a dynamic and relational practice co-constructed through ongoing family negotiation. We contribute to information science and HCI by offering a new conceptual extension for intergenerational AI literacy and providing design implications for more equitable, culturally attuned, and family-centered AI systems.

Country of Origin
🇺🇸 United States

Page Count
20 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Human-Computer Interaction