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Adrian Neibauer's avatar

Excellent post!

I think there is fascination with offloading the work of teaching (and writing) to technology, whether AI or edtech/Web 1.0 and 2.0 tools, because there is a fear that perhaps technology can give students more of what they need than teachers can. Writing is hard. Teaching is hard! As a teacher, how can I compete with machine learning: a gamified computer program helping students master a particular concept? If I have a classroom of 30 students, all with different learning gaps, needs, and strengths, there is an allure to the idea that I can plug them into the computer and after 15 minutes they will re-emerge with more/better understanding.

What people don’t realize is that while machine learning may be more adaptive, teaching and learning is a human experience requiring human to human interaction. I may be able to learn something from a computer, but I won’t remember it nearly as well as a conversation I had with another person. I won’t be able to make connections to other aspects of my life. Learning is in an innately social act, and AI will always fail in replicating the social humaneness of learning.

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Stephen Fitzpatrick's avatar

As the abilities of genAI models have slightly plateaued in recent months, it may give us a chance to have more of these kinds of philosophical conversations about the overall role AI will play, not just with regard to writing, but also with respect to other important educational areas like scientific research (see the NY Times this morning - https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/10/science/ai-learning-biology.html). But to Marc's point, the observation by Scott Aaronson about his daughter's writing is just incredibly sad and anyone who has spent significant time with AI text output knows that it is not even close to exceeding the kind of professional writing celebrated by authors, reviewers, and readers. GenAI writing at the moment, from a teaching standpoint, is useful for a variety of tasks, including idea generation, outlining, and demonstrating structure and clarity, but originality and style are not its strong suits. In some fields where the writing is often turgid, dense, and tedious (law for example), genAI will likely have a significant impact, especially with its ability to scan and summarize large volumes of information, such as case law. But for more creative and open ended writing projects, genAI is not good enough and may never actually be "good enough" to surpass the best human writing. My focus as a teacher at the moment is trying to harness what genAI writing programs can do "right now" and not get caught up speculating about the future. That is more than enough of a challenge for most teachers in the current AI hype climate.

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