• FreeWilliam@lemmy.ml
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    14 days ago

    I can confirm this is not just in the land of burgers. Back in the war from October to December, I fleed to Germany and went to school there, and the stuff I saw where absolutely disgusting: kids were using ipads (ibads) given to them by the school, the computers ran windows on them, and every time even a single task came up, they would directly resort to artificial unintelligence. When the “ceasefire” started and I finally went back to Lebanon, most of the kids were using Artificial unintelligence to write their essays as well. I don’t blame these kids, they don’t know better, they don’t know how artificial unintelligence is trained from the stolen work of the people, they don’t know what non-free software is, and they don’t know how these devices/software are tracking their every move. It’s up to the school’s to teach them such and schools are doing a terrible job both in America and internationally.

  • Eugene V. Debs' Ghost@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    15 days ago
    • Teachers are overworked, underpaid, some still using course work that hasn’t been updated in years despite what the field has advanced
    • Students go into college due to the social expectation, some even unsure of what to get into as a career or even a class
    • Exceeding above the course requirements does nothing for your GPA, an A that got a “110%” and an A that got 90% are the same.
    • Students failing or passing still rack up debt for this social expectation
    • Teachers still failing to pay bills for this social need

    Yeah AI is the fault here, its not the system at large been fucked over since Reagan.

  • boughtmysoul@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    When I asked him why he had gone through so much trouble to get to an Ivy League university only to off-load all of the learning to a robot, he said, “It’s the best place to meet your co-founder and your wife.”

    Yikes.

  • tamal3@lemmy.world
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    15 days ago

    Unpopular opinion:

    I am a public school teacher and I support public schools, but there have been a lot of issues with our education system for a long time. Talk to any kid with ADHD who had to sit through 12 years, and they are indicative of a larger problem. Our idea of school now is as a place that teaches kids to behave and mostly follow rote instruction. Wouldn’t it be so much better if we were teaching kids to be creative thinkers, work well in groups, problem solve, and think critically about the information they’re getting? We know that’s what school should be, but maybe now we will be forced to go there. Yes, there will be issues like learned helplessness and certain skills being difficult to teach, but it’s kind of exciting too.

    Though it’s also possible that public schools will close and only the wealthy kids will be well-educated… can we not, please?

    • brognak@lemm.ee
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      15 days ago

      Man, I am 38. When I was in highschool I was in an alternative curriculum Math program called IMP, and it is/was literally what your talking about.

      Instead of memorizing equations we were instead given a hypothetical situation and learned to solve it socratically both through conversations as a class with the teacher, and in small groups to try and figure out how to solve it. It made me love math so much I almost made it my life, it was literally everything I needed as a severely ADHD teen. Everything was a puzzle to be solved, and when you solved it you gained not just knowledge, but the perspective to know where the knowledge applies.

      • andros_rex@lemmy.world
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        15 days ago

        OpenSciEd is a model that teaches science like that. There’s been a ton of pushback from conservatives.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      15 days ago

      only the wealthy kids will be well-educated

      You could argue we’re already way too far down this road. Quality of education is very dependent on location. Some of it is rich districts but also richer states. Whatever level of granularity you want, there’s always sone more willing or more able to spend money on better educating their children.

      For all its faults, Department of Education was at least trying to set minimum standards for those areas unwilling to invest in a good education system and minimum investments for those unable. We desperately needed to raise this bar, not remove it

      Anyhow my kids school leaned into ai a bit and taught the kids some valuable lessons about how it works, where it helps, and especially its limitations. There’s nothing wrong with ai as a tool, as by long as you don’t treat it as a magical thing that can think for you

  • melsaskca@lemmy.ca
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    14 days ago

    It’s breathtaking how quickly the President of the United States and his good South African buddy can topple a superpower.

  • Eggyhead@lemmings.world
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    15 days ago

    NGL, it’s really f*cking depressing when you give students 30m to create something of their own imagination, and they do it in the first minute with chatGPT and spend the other 29m playing games the phone and asking to “go to the bathroom” whenever they notice someone in the hallway.

    The excuses you hear when you do something so oppressive as to request they keep their phones in their own backpacks for the duration of the task.

    • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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      15 days ago

      I regularly advocate for banning phones from schools but people here in Lemmy (same on Reddit years ago) completely lose their shit with that idea, start talking how that’ll leave them defenseless in an emergency, how it is torture, how they absolutely can’t live without them

      Not thirty years ago nobody had cellphones in school, they barely existed, and everything was fine, everyone was fine without and with cellphones I see so much shit going on. Yes, it’s the Future, kids need cellphones, but they also need to learn to be without cellphone, and they need to learn responsible use.

      • Eggyhead@lemmings.world
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        15 days ago

        I worked in a school in Asia that actually banned students from bringing their phones to school. One year there was an earthquake in the morning that caused all the trains to stop for half a day while they checked the rails. We were all on our way to the school, got stranded, and some had to walk for hours to get back home. The school got a few calls from parents and the policy was changed the very next week. Now students can bring their phones, but they need to be turned in at the front office when they arrive.

        One girl forgot to do it once, so she put her phone her locker. Another earthquake set off the warning alarm system and her phone went off in the hallway. Later that day I saw her getting lectured hard by the staff and the poor thing was in tears. She was actually a good student, so it was weird seeing her in that scenario.

        Anyway, I wouldn’t mind the idea of students handing in phones at the front desk, but I was allowed to pack a cd player, a Nokia, and a variety of other devices around my school as a kid. I don’t really see smartphones as being much different, so I don’t mind them being around just so long as students are using them in their own time.

      • Novaling@lemmy.zip
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        12 days ago

        Outright banning them from schools is wrong imo, but if I had to put my phone in a locked box every class, I would’ve lived. I just think banning them outright is bad for needing to contact parents, especially for kids like me who had after school activities often.

        My only issue I had with HS teachers were the ones who bitched about people having headphones/earbuds in during class. Obviously I don’t have them in during instruction or group work as that would be disrespectful, but if you’re not at the front of the room talking and we’re doing individual work, I want to have my earbuds in. I had a study block teacher who was so fucking anal about phones and earbuds, when it is literally a fucking break class to do whatever the fuck you want/need to do.

        I just really like having music or background noise while doing work.

        EDIT: God this blew up.

        Well first off, I DEFINITELY remember not being able to contact my parents while at elementary school because they had out state phone numbers, so unless they were at home, I literally couldn’t contact them. Furthermore, if teachers get angry at kids simply going to the bathroom, you think they’re going to let us ask them to call our parents? Hell no.

        Also, how is putting earbuds in while someone ISN’T teaching disrespectful? If you’re not lecturing at the moment, then I’m putting my earbuds in. I don’t always need them to get work done, but I prefer to. It’s especially great if the class is being noisy, as I can put my music on to drown out the outside conversations. There are 30+ year old people who didn’t have phones growing up that like to play music while working.

        Please remember, most of those who oppose the introduction of phones to schools are part of the gen who decided to introduce them to us and bought the damn phones for the kids.

        • Eggyhead@lemmings.world
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          15 days ago

          My only issue I had with HS teachers were the ones who bitched about people having headphones/earbuds in during class. Obviously I don’t have them in during instruction or group work as that would be disrespectful, but if you’re not at the front of the room talking and we’re doing individual work, I want to have my earbuds in. I had a study block teacher who was so fucking anal about phones and earbuds, when it is literally a fucking break class to do whatever the fuck you want/need to do.

          I actually agree with this. If I have kids doing individual work in my class, I could care less if they’re using their phones or have headphones in as long as 1) they’re working, and 2) they’re willing to put it aside when I need their attention again. I’m actually much more productive with music on, so who am I to judge?

          • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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            12 days ago

            who am I to judge?

            You’re the teacher?

            I know that kids may want / like to do something their way, but how about you learn it the normal way too? You can do your home work at home with music, I did that too, that’s fine, but in class you pay attention

            • Eggyhead@lemmings.world
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              11 days ago

              Again, if they’re doing individual work with headphones in, and they’re clearly being productive, I don’t see a problem with it. If they’re doing it while I’m actively trying to teach, that would be a problem.

        • tamal3@lemmy.world
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          15 days ago

          Many middle schoolers I work with have an ear bud in at all times, and as an ESL teacher my population of kids really needs to practice processing spoken English without that as a distraction. Hell, that applies to every kid… This isn’t an issue of somebody listening to music in the hallway or while studying, this is during class, during lecture, during group work, while writing essays, while reading…

        • Cocodapuf@lemmy.world
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          14 days ago

          I just think banning them outright is bad for needing to contact parents, especially for kids like me who had after school activities often.

          Ok, well that’s completely ridiculous.

          Look, 25 years ago nobody had cell phones in school. Kids had just as many after school activities, this wasn’t a problem. It was sometimes inconvenient, but not a problem. It’s also worth remembering, many rooms in every high school have phones, you’ll be able to use one if you need to.

          I get wanting to have your phone throughout the day, I do. But on the other hand… no.

          • Resonosity@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            14 days ago

            many rooms in every high school have phones

            You mean like landlines teachers had at their desks?

            I suppose that’s fair.

        • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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          12 days ago

          I’m kind of amazed with reading this, really.

          No, kids don’t need phones. Do you think that after school activities didn’t exist thirty years ago? They did and omg, nobody had cell phones so yeah, so ma y kids disappeared and died because of that and of course nothing like that happened because you plan that stuff ahead and worst case, a student can ask the teacher or some central ooi t where all cellphones are kept to make a quick important call.

          Same thing also goes for head sets. How the heck do you think we did that thirty years ago? Hint: we simply didn’t because it wasn’t a thing, it didn’t exist. Walkmans barely came into existence and you could wear one outside class, all fine, but I side classes you’re there to learn, not to listen to your favorite music or podcast or influencers.

          Id I’d have to allow headsets in class I’d refuse to teach. I’m not there to dick around or wsste my time, I’m there to teach and you’re there to learn, not to play or dick around

      • WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works
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        15 days ago

        honestly a few years ago I didn’t agree with it, but now things are enshittifying so much that it really seems to be the better option now. it’ll unfortunately bar even those from using their phones who would use it for other things than mindless scrolling, using ai chatbots and playing microtransaction and ad filled games, but for the whole class and the whole generation it would be better in the end.

        • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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          12 days ago

          To me the point is a simple question: why are you at school?

          Unless the class is explicitly to teach you how to use your phone responsibly, nobody should have a phone in school. Any arguments I’ve heard against that always boil down to “but I wannah doom scroohooollll” or some variation of that

      • Gigasser@lemmy.world
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        14 days ago

        I mean, you could probably solve this shit by restricting the types of phones used to dumb phones. Phones only capable of texting and calls. Perhaps some basic access to school websites and Wikipedia too. Everything else default blacklisted.

        • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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          11 days ago

          That is just no phones with extra steps

          Just leave the damn thing in a special storage at the start of your school day, or in your locker. During lunch you pick it up, and when you leave you take it with you

      • mister_flibble@lemm.ee
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        15 days ago

        I mean, I was in high school when the cell phones were largely flip phones and that one nokia brick that could probably survive being run over by a tank and at that point the rule was “nobody gives a shit if it’s in your pocket/in your bag and on silent, but if I see it or if it’s making loud disruptive noises from wherever you’ve got it it’s going in my desk until the bell rings”. That still seems a reasonable middle ground in my opinion. That way, it’s still accessible enough in the event of an actual emergency but not usable otherwise.

        • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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          11 days ago

          Yeah, that was back when a single person had a cell phone it was a wow thing. Now everyone has it, and the addiction and doom scrolling is real. Kids will have a headset in during class.

          Nope, all of it, out. Leave it in your locker, store it at a single special place, whatever, but not in class

      • Zexks@lemmy.world
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        14 days ago

        This is survivorship bias. Many weren’t fine but you don’t get to hear from them today.

    • ramble81@lemm.ee
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      15 days ago

      Ngl. I bought a signal jammer for my wife to use in her classroom (after all, it said “for educational purposes only”) and the kids could never figure out why the signal sucked so bad in her classroom during class times. She never got caught using it and never had to worry about them being on their phones.

      If there was an emergency, people would just call the front office and they could always reach her on the land line in the classroom.

    • billbasher@lemmy.world
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      14 days ago

      Dunno Yeah I disagree with AI. I grew up without phones but they should not be used in schools.

      • Eggyhead@lemmings.world
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        13 days ago

        I actually sometimes ask my students to use their phones to produce presentations and such (AI permitted). I just think the rule needs to be no phones in sight otherwise, and the phone stays if you go to the bathroom.

          • Eggyhead@lemmings.world
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            11 days ago

            I wouldn’t go so far as to say my opinion is better than anyone else’s, it just an experience that suits the context of the life I’m living now. There are definitely schools out there where the learning culture probably couldn’t handle it.

    • dependencyinjection@discuss.tchncs.de
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      14 days ago

      I was uninterested in school because nothing was ever done to make me interested, even at home.

      Later in life I was diagnosed with ADHD and now I’m a software developer. Sadly school isn’t for everybody and I just thought I was stupid and lazy, it turns out I was fine I just needed the right help.

      Edit: Votes don’t matter but I’d love to know the reasoning for the 5 downvotes on this. Like why don’t you put across your opposition.

      • interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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        15 days ago

        Well it’s not like you had a choice in the matter and that’s why they don’t care how interested you are. You and the rest of your batch just need to sit still for an hour and a half until you get a break walking to the next boredom session.

        I find it quite incredible that I spent 14 years of 40 hours weeks listening to people talk about stuff I did not care about under the assumption that if I didn’t I’d end up homeless so they never tried to make me care.

        Fortunately we had a computer at home to learn about the stuff I actually cared about.

        I find it crushing that they’re still making students sit and listen about this boring useless shit when they can just ask their phones about whatever they’d be trying to do if they weren’t listening to a course plan from the 1800s about completely obsolete and irrelevant things.

        How can this incredibly important phase of life be so hopelessly poisoned by school for absolutely no reasons at all.

        • Zexks@lemmy.world
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          11 days ago

          The “boring useless shit” your talking about is that stuff that teaches people not to repeat dumb ass decisions. The stuff like social studies tells us WHY things are the way they are. The fact that there are people in the US that are cheering for taxation without representation is EXACTLY why we need those boring classes and why you should have to sit through them until you fucking get it. Unfortunately we’ve let too many through under the guise of no one left behind that we’ve crwate a couple of generations of complete and utter morons. Morons that stack with lead poisoned and aging geriatrics with dementia. And now we have Trump. Trump is what you get when you ignore everything else in favor of only those things you find interesting or easy.

    • roofuskit@lemmy.world
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      15 days ago

      If your school is not supporting teachers with a cell phone policy you should try to find another place to teach and tell them exactly why when you leave.

      Edit: this is also something your union should be pushing for. I’m surprised parents haven’t demanded it.

      • Eggyhead@lemmings.world
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        15 days ago

        I don’t care that much. I live on an island and most of my “students” are actually just tourists pretending they’re there for educational purposes.

          • Eggyhead@lemmings.world
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            14 days ago

            Well yes, and it’s a tourism based economy, which means I usually don’t have to deal with any particular group for longer than a few weeks. Some groups are loads of fun and don’t have any problems with their phones. It usually just depends on which part of wherever they’re coming from, and how life is like for them back home.

    • Mike@lemm.ee
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      15 days ago

      Because school is boring, that’s why.

      Most people don’t need to learn beyond the fourth grade, especially because calculators and now GPT exist for instant answers.

      And I say this as someone who wasted his time all the way up to a Master’s degree just to show society I too followed the beaten path. It’s time I’ll never get back.

      • shoo@lemmy.world
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        15 days ago

        Good god, if you went through an entire education and don’t realize how fucked of a take that is I don’t know what to say. Go try again at a different school maybe?

        • Mike@lemm.ee
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          13 days ago

          It’s not a take, it’s how children (and adults, frankly) feel about school. It’s not great at making you a capable adult.

          Do you know how useful my two diplomas were to get a job? Nothing. Zero. Zilch. None of the theories I learned were useful, neither on the job nor for their own sake.

          As for middle school, exactly what did you learn that you think is so useful for daily life? I’d happily replace learning “how to discover x in n dimensions” with basic financial literacy, for example.

          The latter years of the school system are quite literally a waste of time. The useful stuff you learn before high school.

          • shoo@lemmy.world
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            15 days ago

            As for middle school, exactly what did you learn that you think is so useful for daily life?

            Off the top of my head: basic biology so I’m not dumb enough to be antivax. History subjects that require more than elementary maturity so maybe we can avoid another Holocaust. Enough physics, ecology and chemistry that I can comprehend how climate change is happening. How basic statistics work so I’m not completely lost when someone throws around misleading data.

            None of that is automatic from a 4th grade education and is crucial to be a functioning citizen. Learning to take unquestioned GPT answers is not a substitute for actually learning any of those.

            You either went to a painfully bad pipeline of schools or were too dumb to recognize the important parts.

      • Eggyhead@lemmings.world
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        15 days ago

        It’s possible, but it takes time and effort to prepare, and I’m not getting paid at home, so I’m reluctant to do it.

        You could offer the students a choice: no AI and a 5 slide presentation, or allow AI but with a 15 slide presentation, then let them decide. AI makes work more efficient for us, so if we can be 3x more productive, I should expect 3x more product.

        I taught an ESL group once. One of the girls, around 15-17, plastered a bunch of ChatGPT text on the slide and sat the whole period on her phone. When it was her group’s turn, she quickly realized the position she put herself in as she was now in at the front of the class trying to sound out a wall of high-level English words she’d never heard before. I gave her the standard score because, even though she failed the task, she tried really hard to read out all those difficult words and I thought that was probably more work than anyone else had done.

        • Kühlschrank@lemmy.world
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          14 days ago

          I don’t understand how you are not paid for planning time. Without providing that the school just makes their teachers glorified babysitters.

          • Eggyhead@lemmings.world
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            13 days ago

            Yep. I totally agree. Hopefully I’ll find a school that does pay me for planning time eventually,

        • Walk_blesseD@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          14 days ago

          I gave her the standard score because, even though she failed the task, she tried really hard to read out all those difficult words and I thought that was probably more work than anyone else had done.

          That is a tragic indictment on the state of your class. You are failing your students by refusing to give them failing marks for this shit.

          • Eggyhead@lemmings.world
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            14 days ago

            I think she learned the lesson on her own on that one. No need to rub salt on the wound.

            Furthermore, at their level, they already assume that they’re hopeless. I don’t want to reinforce that idea and discourage them from reproaching the subject later on. We’re talking about a lower vs mid elementary proficiency rating here, so no one’s life is changing.

    • OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml
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      15 days ago

      You gave them a task, they used their imagination to apply it, in a different way than you expected, by using a new tool which is a non traditional method you asked for but the task still got completed. They still loosely completed the task 30 times ahead of schedule by using their imagination on how to constructively solve your problem, utilizing a tool in their imaginary bag.

      I don’t think it’s wrecking the system as long as the LLMs could be trained and ensure strict accuracy (yes I know they can be inaccurate but again so is any tool in its infancy), the system fails people everyday as a whole. I think it’s changing the traditional paradigm. Maybe for the better, maybe not. Time will tell. I think ChatGPT is a tool in its infancy. It’s changing the way minds think fundamentally like for isntance critical thinking skills decline by relying on “AI” but it frees up the mind to grow in other ways to adjust to the new paradigm.

      I think the true point here is fear from breaking traditional values. Humans have never accelerated faster with current technology thats with or without LLM usage.

      • Walk_blesseD@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        14 days ago

        Holy fuck, we are so cooked.

        This is such a concavebrained take. The point of exercises handed out in schools isn’t the accomplishment of the set tasks; it’s that students internalise the processes necessary to do the task themselves and thereby learn those skills.

        Thus, giving away a task to a LLM is only “using their imagination on how to constructively solve [the] problem, utilising a tool in their imaginary bag” in the same way that bullying a nerd into doing the work for them used to be.

        I think it’s changing the traditional paradigm. Maybe for the better, maybe not. Time will tell. I think ChatGPT is a tool in its infancy. It’s changing the way minds think fundamentally like for isntance critical thinking skills decline by relying on “AI” but it frees up the mind to grow in other ways to adjust to the new paradigm.

        This is so obviously for the worse. Losing the ability to think critically isn’t “freeing up the mind to grow in other ways:” basic critical thought is a foundational prerequisite to fully developing as a person capable of participating in society in the current age in much the same way as basic literacy is. It’s limiting the mind from growing in any meaningful way.

        And don’t get it twisted, you’re just saying this shit to be contrarian. I doubt you actually believe this development could be a good thing. Like come the fuck on, let’s say in ten years’ time you get into some kinda accident and need surgery. There is no way you’d would want your surgeon to be someone who ‘did’ most of their assessments in med school with a fucking chatbot. Who are you kidding???

      • Eggyhead@lemmings.world
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        14 days ago

        You’re not wrong, but the difference is that they came up with a creative solution to avoid the task, not a creative solution to engage the task. If I ask them follow up questions to explain their thoughts and reasoning behind their own work, I get deer in the headlights.

        Now, I think the tide is rising with AI and it’s sink or swim if you’re a teacher, so it’s better to just learn what AI is and how to leverage it no matter what people think of it, or if I’m even getting paid for my effort.

        A different approach I’m considering is embracing AI for teenage groups and changing the format of the course entirely so there’s more interaction (incorporating AI) than production. I’ll be the first at my school to do it, but I’m also the only person there who could tell you what the fediverse is.

        • OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml
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          14 days ago

          Now I get that 100 percent. Avoiding the task makes total sense, especially coming from students of all ages. I absolutely think critical thinking skills are foundational to understanding and knowledge and need to be practiced, learned so much more than they are.

          I think rather than free range use of LLMs or any other tool there needs to be some guidance. I don’t think clogging the system with dumb laws will do it, and I certainly don’t have all the answers. But with the usage of GPT if it can be made explicitly accurate within reason, one can gain knowledge at an accelerated rate due to the speed it can process vast data.

          Its awesome to see teachers, educators trying to evolve and improve the learning experience which we desperately need. So thanks for putting in the extra effort whether your rewarded or not financially. The real people the got failed, or generally care thank you for your efforts!

            • OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml
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              13 days ago

              Educators are the future for us all. Knowledge and how to apply it is everything even more so the faster humanity accelerates.

              I think it sucks your care and compassion isn’t financially rewarded from a school level but the effort, care, and value of going the extra mile always gets noticed/remembered and should be rightfully encouraged and appreciated. Respect.

              *We all know these hellion kids are a handful to deal with 😂

  • p3n@lemmy.world
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    15 days ago

    Is it really screwing up the education system, or is it just revealing how screwed up it already was?

    • kamen@lemmy.world
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      15 days ago

      Came here to say that. If AI has the leeway to affect things in a negative way, then we’re not focusing on the right things to begin with. If kids are graded sometimes for the amount of (not necessarily coherent and sound) text they’re able to spit out, this is what you get.

      • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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        15 days ago

        Not US but I still remember printing off a full page of text, teacher looked at it for less than 5 seconds before giving it a tick. This is all meaningless, no one is reading it, no one cares, nothing matters.

          • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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            14 days ago

            I would have thought marking coursework has a higher standard than upvoting a lemmy post, but turns out it’s the other way around

    • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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      14 days ago

      Well, here’s how you figure that out - think about it with your brain. Should children and young adults be given materials and assignments that require them to use thinking and develop their brains, or should they be given machines to do their thinking for them so that it’s easier to complete schoolwork?

      One route develops valuable brain skills that can be useful for life, and the other teaches dependency on fancy machines to accomplish the same.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      15 days ago

      The corrupt cheapskates trying to nickel and dime every ISD in the country to bankruptcy absolutely fell over one another at the opportunity to fire staff and replace them with Clippy.

      Twenty years ago, state officials were all fawning over the idea of turning every university in the country into a pile subscription based Udemy online courses. Ten years ago, letting Pearson hijack the lesson plan of every classroom in the country was the dream. This has been a long time coming.

  • HexesofVexes@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    Ah yes, goal misalignment at its finest.

    The students need high grades to get a job, so they focus on ensuring that happens (AI use being the easy path).

    The teachers have progression targets to meet, so they focus on ensuring this happens (keep the AI vulnerable assessments).

    If you want to change a module as a teacher, good luck getting that work loaded when you should be implementing AI in your curriculum ^_^

    • Modern_medicine_isnt@lemmy.world
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      14 days ago

      If success is determined by a metric, the metric will go up. Any relation to actual increase in value is coincidental. Lol. Long ago someone tried to incentivize programers by giving abonus per bug fixed. Didn’t last long before they blew through the bonus budget and realized the programers were putting in bugs so they could fix them. (Urban legend really… probably)

    • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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      14 days ago

      AI is bullshit and has no place in a school curriculum outside of computer science. Keep that shit away from children if you want them to have any critical thinking skills.

      • InputZero@lemmy.world
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        14 days ago

        In practice you’re right, and I’m not going to even try to argue the real life consequences AI has caused. However I disagree that AI doesn’t have any place in the education system. Used on the appropriate problems, AI is a tool that makes a few things which were challenging to compute much easier. One example is large AI models folding proteins for medical research. A problem that took a computer a day or more to solve can be solved in hours on the same equipment using AI software. That’s just one application that admittedly isn’t useful to school aged children but it’s still one useful example of AI. There are others. Students should be taught how to use AI properly, and part of that is teaching them what it’s good at and what it’ll never be able to do.

        The part I get angry about is disgusting Tech Bro Billionaires trying to shove AI into every piece of software they can. Just like the block chain they’re over promising and there’s a bubble. Unlike block chain technology AI actually has a few useful applications and because of that it’ll take a lot longer that BitCoin to finally level out.

        • _g_be@lemmy.world
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          14 days ago

          The protein-folding ai is not the same as the generative ai.

          It’s really unfortunate that the conversation around AI lumps these different technologies together

          Generative ai is a tool that must be used carefully else the kids will take the easy path.

    • moseschrute@lemmy.world
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      It’s kinda funny cause usually isn’t it the AI agent that has a misaligned goal? Like when I say don’t die, and it discovers that pausing Tetris technical means you never die. But now it’s students that have been given the wrong goal: pass the test by whatever means (e.g. use AI).

      • HexesofVexes@lemmy.world
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        13 days ago

        That’s the real joke behind it all, the use of AI is such a problem because we’re turning education into a stamp dispenser - everyone needs an A* to get anywhere.

        AI has given every student a path to this - however if industry stopped demanding that universities train their damn staff for them, and instead insist we teach their future staff how to be trained (as well as giving them subject specific knowledge), then we’d see the misalignment vanish. Once the need for an A* to land a good job is gone, then so is the misalignment.

  • Norin@lemmy.world
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    15 days ago

    I teach at a community college. I see a lot of AI nonsense in my assignments.

    So much so that I’m considering blue book exams for the fall.

    • Gloria@sh.itjust.works
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      15 days ago

      For anyone who is also not from the US:

      A blue book exam is a type of test administered at many post-secondary schools in the United States. Blue book exams typically include one or more essays or short-answer questions. Sometimes the instructor will provide students with a list of possible essay topics prior to the test itself and will then choose one or let the student choose from two or more topics that appear on the test.

      EDIT, as an extra to solve the mystery:

      Butler University in Indianapolis was the first to introduce exam blue books, which first appeared in the late 1920s.[1] They were given a blue color because Butler’s school colors are blue and white; therefore they were named “blue books”.

      • errer@lemmy.world
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        15 days ago

        Importantly it is hand written, no computers.

        Biggest issue is that kids’ handwriting often sucks. That’s not a new problem but it’s a problem with handwritten work.

        • MangoCats@feddit.it
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          15 days ago

          Speaking from a life of dyspraxia - no, not everyone with sucky handwriting is lazy, many of us would spend 95% of our capacity on making the writing legible and be challenged to learn the actual topic as a result.

          • Norin@lemmy.world
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            15 days ago

            This is why we have accommodations offices at colleges.

            No problem giving an alternative for those who need it.

            • MangoCats@feddit.it
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              13 days ago

              In the 1980s that wasn’t really a thing. Besides, it taught me a valuable skill: I partnered with someone who was good at taking notes and I was good at paying attention without taking any notes - she, too, had a problem understanding what she was writing down while writing it down, but took beautiful copies of the lecture. So, afterwards we’d get together and I’d explain her notes to her - which helped me to cement the concepts in my head, at least long enough to get through the exam, and she got her notes explained.

        • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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          15 days ago

          Computers with some encyclopedia, but no GPTs are fine, no?

          If a kid can write and train a mini-GPT trainable on that encyclopedia, then maybe they deserve the mark for desperation and ingenuity and being a fucking new Leonardo.

          • MangoCats@feddit.it
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            15 days ago

            GPTs are fine, if you learn to disrespect their output and fix it before presenting it as your own.

            Actually, taught that way, GPT may be a tool for teaching critical thinking - if the professors aren’t too lazy to mark down the garbage output.

              • MangoCats@feddit.it
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                13 days ago

                A lot of people “have trouble getting started” - in all kinds of endeavors. Once you get them rolling, they can see the pattern and do it for themselves next time. If the AI glop gets lucky and copied decent argument from beginning to end (something I’ve seen it fail spectacularly at many times), then that can help jumpstart people who are stuck, but only if they can recognize when it’s just a bunch of glop.

                Really, if would be better for them to read a bunch of samples for themselves (which is what the AI does) and hopefully they can get the pattern. What I think is a horrible approach is to sit in a lecture hall and listen to a little guy down front drone in a monotone about the theory of what you are supposed to do, then try to synthesize from the fragments of what you understood from that what is expected. Samples to work from are much more efficient.

    • MangoCats@feddit.it
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      15 days ago

      I have a friend who has taught Online university writing for the past 10 years. Her students are now just about 100% using AI - her goal isn’t to get them to stop, it’s to get them to recognize what garbage writing is and how to fix it so it isn’t garbage anymore.

      • Riskable@programming.dev
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        15 days ago

        her goal isn’t to get them to stop, it’s to get them to recognize what garbage writing is and how to fix it so it isn’t garbage anymore.

        I wish English teachers did this instead of… Whatever TF they’re doing instead.

        This is something they should’ve been doing all along. Long before the invention of LLMs or computers.

        • BakerBagel@midwest.social
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          15 days ago

          This is the inevitable result of “No Child Left Behind” linking school funding to how students performed on standardized tests. American schools haven’t been about education for the last 20+ years. They are about getting as much funding as possible.

          • MangoCats@feddit.it
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            13 days ago

            American schools haven’t been about education for the last 20+ years. They are about getting as much funding as possible.

            Not just American schools, all the way back to Leonardo DaVinci and beyond it has been all about the funding.

      • Norin@lemmy.world
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        15 days ago

        I teach Philosophy.

        I need them to think for themselves, which just isn’t happening if they turn in work that isn’t theirs.

        So, I’m pretty harsh on anyone using AI. Even if it’s for a discussion post, I’m reporting it to the Academic Integrity office.

  • Chessmasterrex@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    Prelude to the society Vonnegut wrote about in ‘Player Piano’ and Bradbury in ‘Farenheit 451’

    • Ledericas@lemm.ee
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      14 days ago

      basically idiocracy, in idiocracy, it was the AI supercomputer that was running the whole society for the 500years, it was assigning jobs, or removing jobs, or doing other stuff.

  • Furbag@lemmy.world
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    15 days ago

    Imagine paying tens of thousands of dollars (probably of their parents saved money) to go to university and have a chatbot do the whole thing for you.

    These kids are going to get spit out into a world where they will have no practical knowledge and no ability to critically think or adapt.

    • Rooty@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      Do you really think schools teach critical thinking and practical knowledge? State mandated education is geared to produce people who are smart enough to run the system and stupid enough not to question it. The fact that this dullard factory is being distrupted by what is essentially an electronic parrot speaks volumes about the whole charade.

      • Furbag@lemmy.world
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        13 days ago

        I’m not talking about state mandated education. Nobody is required to attend university.

        If you go to a college worth attending, they will teach you critical thinking skills as part of the course requirements.

        Regardless, the situation with generative AI is not helping in that regard.

  • WanderingThoughts@europe.pub
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    15 days ago

    That’s going to be great fun when the AI bubble pops and the subscription prices go up exponentially.

    On the other hand, there have been other opinions about education that say it should be about making or researching something. Give a student a goal and let them figure it out using chatbots or whatever.

    • Chaotic Entropy@feddit.uk
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      15 days ago

      That sounds like a way to make a generation of students wholly reliant on AI, much to Altman’s delight. People are going to still need to know how to do stuff in the future and not just how to request the answers to things from somewhere else.

      • ayyy@sh.itjust.works
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        15 days ago

        (Disclaimer: this is not a fully formed counter-argument to your statement, merely my thought-vomit).

        As a kid growing up in the 90’s you wouldn’t believe the amount of times my parents and teachers vehemently insisted to me that I MUST do dictionary lookup drills because there’s no way I would just always have access to an electronic dictionary in my pocket. I was also told that I absolutely HAD to be fast at paper-based multiplication and long division. It’s not like I would just carry a calculator around with me everywhere I go, that would be insane!

        • Amnesigenic@lemmy.ml
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          15 days ago

          Knowing how to use a physical dictionary or do basic math in your head is absolutely still a good idea, your phone battery can die, your network connection can fail, and doing challenging things with your brain is good for your long term brain health anyway especially while it’s still developing.

          • tamal3@lemmy.world
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            15 days ago

            Maybe, but are there other things we can focus on? For example, as an ESL teacher, why do my newcomers only get a word to word paper dictionary on end of grade exams? I’m pretty sure the state of North Carolina just hates children? There’s literally no reason for this. Give them a digital dictionary.

            • Amnesigenic@lemmy.ml
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              15 days ago

              Paper is a renewable resource, rare metals used in computers aren’t, and the contents of the dictionary will be the same either way

              • tamal3@lemmy.world
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                15 days ago

                Yes but the process of obtaining the information is significantly more difficult. We can, you know, reuse the same 20 translation devices for years, and all kids have a laptop… I feel like you’re focused on the wrong thing.

                • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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                  14 days ago

                  No, it’s only more difficult for those without the skills to use the Index or Table of Contents in a book. Which is not really much of a difficult skill to learn. You pretty much need to know about alphabetical order and how one is at the front and the other is at the end of the book.

                • Amnesigenic@lemmy.ml
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                  15 days ago

                  In what universe is an electronic device being handled by children going to last 20 years? Not ours

              • Tiresia@slrpnk.net
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                15 days ago

                That’s really not true. Paper production takes a lot of (often non-renewable) energy, ink usually consists of non-renewable chemicals, paper is often harvested from nonrenewable destruction of forests (especially in the US with Trump’s plans to cut down national forests), paper production belches a lot of pollution into the air and pollutes a lot of water, etc.

                • Amnesigenic@lemmy.ml
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                  15 days ago

                  The energy can be obtained from renewable sources any time we decide to quit fucking around and make it happen, wood pulp can be replaced with hemp far more easily than that and requires less chemical treatment in the process. There are no similar options for mitigating the negative impact of mining or making our supply of those metals any bigger.

  • Sam_Bass@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    Yet they keep shoving it down our throats forcing us to delete entire systems to be rid of it