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Tomás Herrerasenjo's avatar

It's disheartening to see how, in the name of efficiency, many aspects of our lives are being made programmable to maximize their potential. Conversations and learning experiences are reduced to mere exchanges of information and instructions, with no deeper meaning. Human communication, in all its richness, is seen as the messiest way of delivering information—precisely because of how human it is.

What I find most alarming about the development of these kinds of products is that, even though they offer minimal value, they are still cheaper than paying a teacher or tutor to guide a student. The "service" provided by this technology is poor, yet efficient and cost-effective in the most inhumane way possible, making it scalable and deployable in impoverished or disenfranchised areas. This process ultimately turns human connection into a luxury that only a few can afford. Automation for the many, and human connection for the few.

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Heike Mersmann-Hoffmann's avatar

You make a clear and valid point that I wholeheartedly agree with. I find the suggestion of creating my twin - even if it was "only" an ElevenLabs voice twin - repulsive, much more a twin to teach what I teach. Having said that, I work in a privileged position as a language teacher at a university, with small courses and motivated students whom I can make comfortable to speak and explore the English they are learning. But most of the lectures and even the seminars in the subjects at German universities are attended by hundreds of students at a time. None of them get the chance to regularly ask their lecturers questions or receive feedback on what they might want to say or write, so I can see the attraction of providing a "twin" which would be available to all students. There are no study fees at normal universities in Germany, and private universities are already expensive, but only very few have a really good reputation, so buying a tutor is not in the books (for now). If the AI tutor is subject oriented and offers students the opportunity to engage with the subject in an additional way, I do think this might actually do some good.

And let's not think that if we oppose this development there will be more teachers. There won't. Here in Germany, nobody even wants to become a (school) teacher anymore. At the moment, university jobs are still quite coveted, but the stress level is really high, too.

To me it seems that we need to take action to channel this new technology into a sustainable and helpful direction. We therefore need studies that address how, where and to what end AI tutors are used and explore what happens when students engage with them. We should make students and administrators aware that they may be useful like other tools (e.g. a spell checker), but they will never replace a human teacher because a great part of learning is dependent on human / social interaction.

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