Miguel Guhlin asked on LinkedIn:
“Someone asked these questions in response to a blog entry, and I was wondering, what would YOUR response be?
1. What role/how much should students be using AI, and does this vary based on grade level?
2. What do you think the next five years in education will look like in regards to AI? Complete integration or total ban of AI?”
I commented:
1. Like a pencil or a laptop, AI is a tool to use sometimes and not use other times. The question is about expectations and management.
2. Anywhere that enforces a total ban on AI is going to be playing a never-ending and losing game of catch-up. That said, I have no idea what total integration will look like? Smart teachers are already using AI to develop and improve their lessons, those teachers will know that students can, and both will and should, use these tools as well. But like in question 1… when it’s appropriate. Just because a laptop might be ‘completely integrated’ into a classroom as a tool students use doesn’t mean everything they do in a classroom is with and on a laptop.
—
I’ve already dealt with some sticky issues around the use of AI in a classroom and online. One situation last school year was particularly messy, with a teacher using Chat GPT as an AI detector, rather than other AI detection tools. It turns out that Chat GPT is not a good AI detector. It might be better now, but I can confirm that in early 2023 it was very bad at this. I even put some of my own work into it and I had Chat GPT tell me that a couple paragraphs were written by it, even though I wrote the piece about 12 years earlier.
But what do we do in the meantime? Especially in my online school where very little, if any, work is supervised? Do we give up on policing altogether and just let AI do the assignments as we try to AI proof them? Do we give students grades for work that isn’t all theirs? How is that fair?
This is something we will figure out. AI, like laptops, will be integrated into education. Back in 2009 I presented on the topic, “The POD’s are Coming!”
(Slideshow here) About Personally Owned Devices… laptop etc… coming into our classrooms, and the fear of these devices. We are at that same point with AI now. We’ll get through this and our classrooms will adapt (again).
And in a wonderful full-circle coincidence, one of the images I used in the POD’s post above was a posterized quote by Miguel Guilin.
It’s time to take the leap. AI might be new… but we’ve been here before.
Howdy, David! I started my long rambling response online at https://www.mguhlin.org
Thanks for responding!!
Miguel
Thank you for the inspiration Miguel… I love that our back-and-forth blog conversations span over 15 years now.
I want to share direct links to your two posts here:
AI Empowered Students? Part 1
https://www.mguhlin.org/2023/11/ai-empowered-students-part-1.html
AI-Powered Students? Part 2
https://www.mguhlin.org/2023/11/ai-powered-students-part-2.html
Thanks, David. I continue to be amazed that the “old blogger” crowd is still alive and kicking. I admit to wanting to write an epitaph and publish it far in the future, but I’m not sure how much longer these technologies will remain or continue to be relevant. 😉
Part 3 is due out later tonight, as I recall. You will have to tell me if I’m just full of too much fear and doubt about the future. A part of me says that no matter what happens, human beings can choose to find joy and happiness in daily interactions with each other, AI-mediated or not.