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Stephen Fitzpatrick's avatar

A couple of observations / reactions to Marc's post. 1) My sense is that most teachers have indeed moved on, whether for the reasons Marc said or for other, more pressing issues; 2) I'm not sure the free upgrade to the most powerful model is going to change the needle, either for teachers or students - many have not necessarily checked out, but they may not immediately see the improvement in the more advanced models which high frequency users take for granted; 3) administrators are mostly clueless and the tech folks who may be pushing for the kinds of regulatory concerns mentioned generally don't have the power or influence to put this on their plates; 4) the horse is already out of the barn and I fear it's already too late for most teachers to catch up given the ubiquity of products and speed with which change is occurring - the changes demoed by OpenAI yesterday were likely ignored by all but the most interested and curious educators; 5) perhaps this is the saving grace, but most students are clueless as well - on the plus side, I did an informal survey (you can view a copy of the survey here - https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe8Bz6ui--7LEkP7L3w3QSPYoAtS4rqZI56YDiPRL2yqW4P1Q/viewform?usp=sf_link) of our HS students and over 80 percent recognized that AI can take away from their learning experience. Only 1/3 claimed they have used it and most (more than 50%) said they did not use because it was against the rules or they were ethically opposed (60/40 split on those two issues). Granted, this is one small survey from an independent school and who knows how honest they were being, but the responses align with what I have been seeing, I would love to see more data across a wider spectrum of schools and students. Bottom line is I'm not sure I see a major change in use this fall barring even more advanced models emerging but I don't think that will do it either. One teacher recently emailed me whether AI was just a fad or she had to learn it. I fear that's the norm.

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David Harold Chester's avatar

The useful information and knowledge being provided by the AI probably does not cover all the matters and details that the teacher is providing, so for the present, this personal method of teaching is still important.

In future when AI is more resourceful in what it can supply, the students will need to replace their gained knowledge about the subject of their study with a greater ability to operate the AI medium itself, and to use it for getting better knowledge. This strikes me as being at least as difficult as straight cources of their subject, because of how computer management is taught and how the limited power of AI can respond.

For example, when I ask a question, the Chatbot usually replies about the subject first appearing in my question, but pays little regard to the question itself!

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