Generation AI: education reluctantly embraces the bots
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[September 07, 2023]
By Barbara Lewis and Supantha Mukherjee
LONDON/STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - At leading Swedish university Lund,
teachers decide which students can use artificial intelligence to help
them with assignments.
At the University of Western Australia in Perth, staff have talked to
students about the challenges and possible benefits of using generative
AI in their work, while the University of Hong Kong is allowing ChatGPT
within strict limits.
Launched by Microsoft-backed OpenAI on Nov. 30, ChatGPT has become the
world's fastest growing app to date and prompted the release of rivals
like Google's Bard.
GenAI tools, such as ChatGPT, draw on patterns in language and data to
generate anything from essays to videos to mathematical calculations
that superficially resemble human work, spurring talk of unprecedented
transformation in many fields including academia.
Academics are among those who could face an existential threat if AI is
able to replicate - at much faster speeds - research currently done by
humans. Many also see the benefits of GenAI's ability to process
information and data, which can provide a basis for deeper critical
analysis by humans.
"It can help the students to adapt the course material to their
individual needs, aiding them much like a personal tutor would do," said
Leif Kari, vice president for education at Stockholm-based KTH Royal
Institute of Technology.
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO) on Thursday launched what it is says is the first global
guidance on GenAI in education and academic research.
For national regulators, it outlines steps to take on areas such as data
protection and revision of copyright laws, and urges countries to make
sure teachers get the AI skills they need.
CHEATING VERSUS HELPFUL SHORT-CUTS
Some educators draw a comparison between AI and the advent of hand-held
calculators, which began entering classrooms in the 1970s and stirred
debate on how they would affect learning before they were quickly
accepted as essential help.
Some have expressed concern that students might similarly rely on AI to
produce work and effectively cheat - especially as AI content gets
better with time. Passing off GenAI as original work could also raise
copyright issues, prompting questions over whether AI should be banned
in academia.
Rachel Forsyth, a project manager in the Strategic Development Office at
Lund University in southern Sweden, said a ban "feels like something
that we can't enforce".
"We're trying to put the focus back on learning and away from cheating
and policing the students," she said.
Worldwide, the software Turnitin has for decades been one of the main
ways to check for plagiarism.
In April it launched a tool that uses AI to detect AI-generated content.
It has provided that tool free to more than 10,000 education
institutions globally, although it plans to charge a fee from January.
So far, the AI detection tool has found that only 3% of students used AI
for more than 80% of their submissions and that 78% did not use AI at
all, Turnitin data shows.
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Students walk past a classroom building on the campus of the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, North Carolina, U.S.,
September 20, 2018. Picture taken on September 20, 2018.
REUTERS/Jonathan Drake/File Photo
Problems have arisen over what are known as false positives when
text written by humans - in some cases by professors trying to test
the software - has been flagged as written by AI, though those
wrongly accused of using AI can defend themselves if they have saved
various drafts of their work.
Students themselves are busy experimenting with AI and some give it
a poor grade, saying it can summarise at a basic level, but that
facts must always be checked because GenAI cannot distinguish fact
from fiction or right from wrong.
Its knowledge is also limited to what it can scrape from the
internet, which is not enough for very specific questions.
"I reckon AI has a far way to go before it's properly useful," said
Sophie Constant, a 19 year-old law student at England's University
of Oxford.
"I can't ask it about a single case. It just doesn't know and it
doesn't have access to articles I am studying so it is not very
helpful."
CORPORATE SPEED AND SLOW-MOVING REGULATION
UNESCO's latest guidance also flags the risk GenAI will deepen
societal divisions as educational and economic success increasingly
depend on access to electricity, computers and internet that the
poorest do not have.
"We are struggling to align the speed of transformation of the
education system to the speed of the change in technological
progress," Stefania Giannini, assistant director-general for
education at UNESCO, told Reuters.
So far, the European Union (EU) is among those at the forefront of
regulations around the use of AI with draft legislation that has yet
to adopted as law. The regulations do not specifically deal with
education but its broader rules on ethics, for instance, could be
applied to the field.
After its exit from the EU, Britain is also trying to work on
guidelines for the use of AI in education by consulting educators
and says it will release the results later this year.
Singapore, a leader in efforts to train teachers on how to use the
technology, is among the nearly 70 countries that have developed or
planned strategies on AI.
"In terms of universities, as a professor, rather than fighting it,
you need to leverage AI, experience it, develop a good framework,
guidelines and a responsible AI system, and then work with students
to find a mechanism that works for you," said Kirsten Rulf, a
partner at Boston Consulting Group.
Rulf co-negotiated the European Union AI Act in her previous role as
head of digital policy at the German Federal Chancellery.
"I think we are the last generation that has lived in a world
without GenAI."
To hear about how educators are tackling the advance of AI in the
classroom, click here for the Reuters World News daily podcast.
(Editing by Deepa Babington and David Goodman)
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