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perplex | 8 months ago
My own personal experience is that Gen AI is an amazing tool to support learning, when used properly.
Seems likely there will be changes in higher education to work with gen AI instead of against it, and it could be a positive change for both teachers and students.
jplusequalt|8 months ago
Since we're using anecdotes, let me leave one as well--it's been my experience that humans choose the path of least resistance. In the context of education, I saw a large percentage of my peers during K-12 do the bare minimum to get by in the classes, and in college I saw many resorting to Chegg to cheat on their assignments/tests. In both cases I believe it was the same motivation--half-assing work/cheating takes less effort and time.
Now, what happens when you give those same children access to an LLM that can do essentially ALL their work for them? If I'm right, those children will increasingly lean on those LLMs to do as much of their schoolwork/homework as possible, because the alternative means they have less time to scroll on Tik Tok.
But wait, this isn't an anecdote, it's already happening! Here's an excellent article that details the damage these tools are already causing to our students https://www.404media.co/teachers-are-not-ok-ai-chatgpt/.
>[blank] is an amazing tool ... when used properly
You could say the same thing about a myriad of controversial things that currently exist. But we don't live in a perfect world--we live in a world where money is king, and often times what makes money is in direct conflict with utilitarianism.
ryandrake|8 months ago
I think schools are going to have to very quickly re-evaluate their reliance on "having done homework" and using essays as evidence that a student has mastered a subject. If an LLM can easily do something, then that thing is no longer measuring anything meaningful.
A school's curriculum should be created assuming LLMs exist and that students will always use them to bypass make-work.
dowager_dan99|8 months ago
how can kids, think K-12, who don't even know how to "use" the internet properly - or even their phones - learn how to learn with AI? The same way social media and mobile apps made the internet easy, mindless clicking, LLMs make school a mechanical task. It feels like your argument is similar to LLMs helping experienced, senior developers code more effectively, while eliminating many chances to grow the skills needed to join that group. Sounds like you already know how to learn and use AI to enhance that. My 12-yr-old is not there yet and may never get there.
lonelyasacloud|8 months ago
For every person/child that just wants the answer there will be at least some that will want to know why. And these endlessly patient machines are very good at feeding that curiosity.
rightbyte|8 months ago
Wouldn't class room exams enforce that though? Like, imagining LLMs like an older sibling or parent that would help pupils cheat on essays.
SkyBelow|8 months ago
What is the purpose of education? Is it to learn, or to gain credentials that you have learned? Too much of education has become the latter, to the point we have sacrificed the former. Eventually this brings down both, as a degree gains a reputation of no longer signifying the former ever happened.
Or existing systems that check for learning before granting the degree that showed an individual learned were largely not ready for the impact of genAI and teachers and professors have adapted poorly. Sometimes due to lack of understanding the technology, often due to their hands being tied.
GenAI used to cheat is a great detriment to education, but a student using genAI to learn can benefit greatly, as long as they have matured enough in their education process to have critical thinking to handle mishaps by the AI and to properly differentiate when they are learning and when they are having the AI do the work for them (I don't say cheat here because some students will accidentally cross the line and 'cheat' often carries a hint of mens rea). To the mature enough student interested in learning more, genAI is a worthwhile tool.
How do we handle those who use it to cheat? How do we handle students who are too immature in their education journey to use the tool effectively? Are we ready to have a discussion about those learning who only care for the degree and the education to earn the degree is just seen as a means to an end? How to teachers (and increasingly professors) fight back against the pressure of systems that optimize on granting credentials and which just assume the education will be behind those systems (Goodhart's Law anyone)? Those questions don't exist because of genAI, but genAI greatly increased our need to answer them.
murrayb|8 months ago
I too am finding AI incredibly useful for learning, I use it for high level overviews and to help guide me to resources (online formats and books) deeper dives. Claude has so far proven to be an excellent learning partner, no doubt other models are similarly good.
strict9|8 months ago
But that doesn't mean I think my kids should primarily get K-12 and college education this way.
Aperocky|8 months ago
I don't hold my breath on this.
icedchai|8 months ago