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Stephen Fitzpatrick's avatar

Lots to unpack here. From my very specific vantage point as an independent HS teacher, we are not seeing this (yet), at least not in my school or most of our peer schools. I'm going to go out on a limb and say some of this is the (understandable) fault of colleges for not tackling the issue head on - the absolute crickets at most educational institutions on AI use provides a gigantic hole for students to crash through - how are individual teachers supposed to completely upend decades of educational practice overnight in the absence of any guidance by administrators? The Stanford study (https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/13/technology/chatbot-cheating-schools-students.html) from earlier this year seemed to suggest that cheating has not changed much as a result of AI. Time will tell how accurate that is and whether the trend holds true. But I think the larger issue is the glut of AI products saturating the marketplace making it impossible for the average educator, let alone administrator, to figure out which ones might be worthwhile. Enterprising and resourceful students are going to be in the driver's seat until schools step up and have an honest conversation about all the pedagogical implications of genAI and I'm just not seeing it.

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David Webster's avatar

"I've not got an hour to watch this video" - he's far too busy making TikToks

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