Overcoming ChatGPT Fear in 3 Steps
“AI will achieve human levels of intelligence by 2029. I have set the date 2045 for the 'Singularity', which is when we will multiply our effective intelligence a billionfold by merging with the intelligence we have created.” This is according to Ray Kurzweil, Google’s Director of Engineering.
I would have dismissed Ray Kurzweil’s comments as fanciful until I tried ChatGPT for the first time in early December.
Reacting quickly to the release of ChatGPT, many schools are blocking the technology. These include Seattle Public Schools, Los Angeles Unified School District, New York City Public Schools , and more around the world. There are genuine concerns about this new AI tool facilitating cheating and hindering the academic development of students. Will you ban it?
What is ChatGPT?
Well, imagine the internet suddenly had the ability to have a conversation with you and provide you with any information you wanted to know in a style and format that you wanted it in. Got it? Great. We’re about 10% of the way to understanding its capability.
ChatGPT is a website that allows users to put questions into an AI machine and get answers in a fraction of a second. The impressive thing about it is that it simulates human communication very well and can draw upon over 300 billion words worth of information. Not only that, but it can search for this information, synthesise it and output an answer with a high probability of being correct.
Although the applications of this new technology are still very much in their infancy, already the disruption being caused is making some schools run scared.
The main concerns are:
Let’s dive into these concerns and explore the opportunities.
Students using ChatGPT to Plagiarise
Most teachers and educational leaders are naturally worried about the implications of their students being able to generate good quality work with ChatGPT and pass it off as their own.
Some teachers are mitigating against this by making sure any written work is done in class, without technology, and in front of them. In a recent article Daisy Christodoulou, the Director of Education at No More Marking stated that, in her opinion, “it is perfectly acceptable to ban students from using AI for written assessments,and to make greater use of in-person hand-written exams.”
University professors are actively exploring ways to adapt how dissertations are assessed to make sure students actually know their work and haven’t simply asked ChatGPT to complete it. Others are hoping technology can help through the development of plagiarism checkers to identify work generated by AI.
There is another way. I refer you back to Ray Kurzweil’s words at the top of this article. ChatGPT is currently the worst version of this technology we will ever have. Unreleased versions are already much better, and they will continue to get more 'intelligent'. Those of us who had a 'wow' moment when we first used ChatGPT, are going to be having regular 'wow' moments in the coming months and years. So is sticking our head in the sand really the wise thing to do?
Is a system that requires students to do what technology can do in a fraction of the time really getting the most out of their students? This technology will be part and parcel of our personal lives and our work lives. It’s not going away. It would be more beneficial to incorporate this technology
We’ve become proficient at assessing what we’ve taught, but I think it is time to start assessing what our students have learned
My recent appearance on Good Morning Britain delved into the contentious matter of whether ChatGPT should be banned from classroom use and how it could alter assessments for students. Check it out to hear more of my thoughts below.
Students Relying on ChatGPT and not Developing Their Own Skills
There are natural concerns that the presence of ChatGPT will prohibit students from developing skills such as knowledge retention and critical thinking. The implication is that students will not learn and will not be able to critically evaluate the output from AI.
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In the UK we pride ourselves on our PISA OECD ranking for education systems that use memorisation to help students pass exams. It is the key tool in many of our schools to help students pass exams and puts us in a favourable position for Ofsted. Why do we do this?
In “The Three-Box Solution,” Vijay Govindarajan states that organisations should visualise three boxes. Box one is the current system, it’s our performance engine, it’s how we get results now. This is important as it currently works and helps the organisation to survive.
In box three we explore the future of the organisation, how it might be disrupted, and how we meet these challenges. This is where we listen out for ‘weak signals’ of change that could be coming. I’d argue that we have failed to dedicate any meaningful time to box three activities.
Instead, we have got very good at optimising the current system. Our ability to engineer efficiency in the memorisation of knowledge so that students can pass exams is almost ‘factory-like’.
Our lack of vision means that we are now in a position where AI technology is no longer a ‘weak signal’, but a reality banging down on our doors. Workplaces are tearing their hair out in frustration because school leaders have good exam grades but very few skills to deal with a modern dynamic industry.
Also on the horizon are new virtual schools that incorporate critical thinking, communication, and problem-solving
If we are worried that ChatGPT is going to hinder student development, then I think we need to climb out of box one, survey the landscape, and realise that their development is already hindered.
Incorporated into education, tools like ChatGPT can help students become curious about learning, question knowledge, evaluate the outpu,t and put it into practice. Here are my early thoughts on a framework to develop students learning with ChatGPT.
AI replacing job opportunities when students leave school
It’s easy to understand why this concern is so prominent. In our current system ,many courses are designed to teach knowledge so that students can utilise that knowledge in the world.
So what if the knowledge we teach them is known by an AI machine and costs a company a fraction of the price?
Think this is in the distant future? Think again. Check out hire.digitalworkforce.ai
Before you despair, there are real opportunities here for education. When technology is integrated into any organisation well, it should allow people to become ‘more human’. To be valued because of their character and unique qualities. I welcome technology that stops us from being the cogs in a system built for efficiency. A system that turns humans into components and robs us of humanity.
The challenge for our education system is to discover how we can add value to the lives of our students
Concerns around AI are valid, but the opportunities it brings will make our students’ lives better and, in turn, have a positive impact on our world.
So ban it if you want, but be prepared to be left behind.
Interested in diving deeper into ChatGPT in the classroom?
Join us for a free webinar on February 22nd at 7 pm EST where we will be discussing how AI is changing teaching and learning. You'll learn about some of the biggest opportunities and challenges with AI in schools straight from renowned educators Dan Fitzpatrick , Amanda Fox , and Brad Weinstein .
Most recently, part of a consultancy team evaluating the curriculum for Pilot Training in the Australian Air force.
1yWe're starting to see the flaws in a system that relies purely on memorization -good grades but questionable transferable skills the workplace wants. Will AI like Chat GPT force us the reevaluate what learning should look like -and force us to change our focus to application of knowledge and critical thinking.
Human, woman, feminist, teacher, teacher trainer, loves coffee.
1yAfter some attempts, I have already got interesting ways to use ChatGPT. My deep concern now: Am I empowering my students to ask vital questions? Do they know how to judge what is important and what is not? How are they prepared to validate, and verify the AI outcome?
PHD Fellow at University of Technology Sydney
1yAwesome !
Deakin University
1yI like the idea of a Box 3!
Coaching Communication-and-Language Fitness (CLF) + Performance enhancing AI 🤖+🧠=⚡ | Writer | Applied Linguistics Researcher
1yCompletely agree with your view of usefulness of AI tools like chatgpt to potentially help students hone uniquely human skills like problem solving and creativity, but also communication. I currently use chatgpt to train my students in Taiwan to use it as a language and tone editor. As non-English speakers, they often remain tethered to the bits and pieces of Language that keep them from realizing higher order communication skills, like conveying identity, voice and persuasion. AI is changing this. Now I give them templates, and they write first drafts, train them how to use chatgpt to revise the English for a certain tone or attitude, and then analyze and incorporate to create a remix version which I then correct. At this point I can make higher order communication suggestions to help them better understand communication instead of getting mired in lower order language bits and pieces. I recently wrote an op-ed here also emphasizing the value of AI chatbots to nurture curiosity, which is the beginning of real learning. I love the curiosity diagram you posted. (source?) Finally, I was curious myself as to why you did not elaborate more on "box 2" ... perhaps a future article?