ChatGPT Archives | Faculty of Education /edu/tag/chatgpt/ Reinventing education for a diverse, complex world. Tue, 09 Apr 2024 13:08:04 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/28/2020/07/favicon.png ChatGPT Archives | Faculty of Education /edu/tag/chatgpt/ 32 32 AI and the Future of Education /edu/events/ai-and-the-future-of-education-375/ Tue, 09 Apr 2024 13:07:18 +0000 /edu/?post_type=mec-events&p=39576 Panelists from the K-12 and post-secondary educational sectors discuss if, and how, AI can be used creatively in schooling and higher education. As teachers and students grapple daily with these new digital systems, the panelists provide preliminary guidance as to how educators can contend effectively with this major educational challenge.

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A new Enoch Turner Schoolhouse program on the state of public schoolingٴ celebrate the 175th anniversary of the Schoolhouse and the role it played in the development of a provincially supported free school system.

 

AI and the Future of Education event poster

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ChatGPT erupted into the world of education in November, 2022. Defenders hailed this innovation as a great leap forward for teaching, learning and research. Critics, including some leading names in the field of artificial intelligence, were far more cautious about ChatGPT and related AI inventions. Will these developments enhance or stifle creativity? Will they free students’ imaginations or deepen their dependence on technological tools that are not widely understood?

Panelists from the K-12 and post-secondary educational sectors discuss if, and how, AI can be used creatively in schooling and higher education. As teachers and students grapple daily with these new digital systems, the panelists provide preliminary guidance as to how educators can contend effectively with this major educational challenge.

FOR MORE INFORMATION on this free two-part series and to learn more about our panelists and moderator .

The post AI and the Future of Education appeared first on Faculty of Education.

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AI and the Future of Education /edu/events/ai-and-the-future-of-education/ Tue, 09 Apr 2024 13:04:49 +0000 /edu/?post_type=mec-events&p=39574 Panelists from the K-12 and post-secondary educational sectors discuss if, and how, AI can be used creatively in schooling and higher education. As teachers and students grapple daily with these new digital systems, the panelists provide preliminary guidance as to how educators can contend effectively with this major educational challenge.

The post AI and the Future of Education appeared first on Faculty of Education.

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A new Enoch Turner Schoolhouse program on the state of public schoolingٴ celebrate the 175th anniversary of the Schoolhouse and the role it played in the development of a provincially supported free school system.

 

AI and the Future of Education event poster

 TO REGISTER FOR IN-PERSON
 TO REGISTER FOR VIRTUAL

ChatGPT erupted into the world of education in November, 2022. Defenders hailed this innovation as a great leap forward for teaching, learning and research. Critics, including some leading names in the field of artificial intelligence, were far more cautious about ChatGPT and related AI inventions. Will these developments enhance or stifle creativity? Will they free students’ imaginations or deepen their dependence on technological tools that are not widely understood?

Panelists from the K-12 and post-secondary educational sectors discuss if, and how, AI can be used creatively in schooling and higher education. As teachers and students grapple daily with these new digital systems, the panelists provide preliminary guidance as to how educators can contend effectively with this major educational challenge.

FOR MORE INFORMATION on this free two-part series and to learn more about our panelists and moderator .

The post AI and the Future of Education appeared first on Faculty of Education.

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ChatGPT: One Year Later....A Roundtable Discussion /edu/events/chatgpt-one-year-later-a-roundtable-discussion/ Fri, 24 Nov 2023 14:11:57 +0000 /edu/?post_type=mec-events&p=38080 Convening on Nov 30, the one-year anniversary of ChatGPT’s launch, this roundtable brings together a diverse group of scholars to reflect on the promises and perils of generative AI in the context of higher education. Turning their eyes to the future, each of our panelists will bring forward a topic or concern they see as […]

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Convening on Nov 30, the one-year anniversary of ChatGPT’s launch, this roundtable brings together a diverse group of scholars to reflect on the promises and perils of generative AI in the context of higher education. Turning their eyes to the future, each of our panelists will bring forward a topic or concern they see as being underexplored, laying the groundwork for future conversations and collaborations as we continue to make our way in this new educational landscape.

headshots of: Dr. sava saheli singh (Assistant Professor of Digital Futures in Education), Dr. Kelly Bergstrom (Assistant Professor, Department of Communication & Media Studies), Ryan Collis (Doctoral Candidate, Graduate Program in Education); image of robot sitting in front of a birthday cake with candles

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A Bot Aced My Homework /edu/2023/07/06/a-bot-aced-my-homework/ Thu, 06 Jul 2023 18:27:44 +0000 /edu/?p=35887 How ChatGPT is impacting the academic experienceBy Sharon Aschaiek RELEASED LAST NOVEMBER, ChatGPT can compose essays and news releases, research subjects, suggest story ideas, even have philosophical conversations and debug computer code. Make a request, and it scans the web for relevant information and, using what it has learned from training data, almost instantly generates […]

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How ChatGPT is impacting the academic experience
By Sharon Aschaiek

RELEASED LAST NOVEMBER, ChatGPT can compose essays and news releases, research subjects, suggest story ideas, even have philosophical conversations and debug computer code. Make a request, and it scans the web for relevant information and, using what it has learned from training data, almost instantly generates a response that is usually on topic and well-drafted.

But don’t be alarmed.

While the artificial intelligence tool can write, research and “converse” in surprisingly human ways, it can’t replace the “valuable components of a well-rounded education.” That’s what the bot says when pointedly asked if its very existence will threaten critical thinking and problem-solving at the university level. “I see myself,” it continues, “as a complementary tool that can enhance learning, but not as a replacement for it.”

But can we believe that?

Since ChatGPT lacks common sense and emotional intelligence (and also can’t understand the subtleties of context and humour) the tool sometimes gives inaccurate answers. Even OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said as much in a tweet posted last December: “It’s a mistake to be relying on it for anything important right now. It’s a preview of progress; we have lots of work to do on robustness and truthfulness.” Not the most encouraging of words, and yet here we are – with a chatbot that’s got many in academe rethinking what they do.

Pina D’Agostino

As a tool that is incredibly helpful for students to use – and misuse – in their academic work, it’s compelling university professors and administrators to consider how to both leverage its educational value and hedge against cheating. “People are stressed out about it … and very concerned about what it might do for their assessment practices,” says Robin Sutherland-Harris, an educational developer at 91ɫ’s Teaching Commons.

It’s not exhaustive, and it’s never going to replace someone actually doing the work

— Robin Sutherland-Harris

Within only two months of its launch, ChatGPT reached a record-setting 100 million monthly users; it took TikTok nine months to achieve that number. Because it can continuously learn from new queries it receives, ChatGPT is getting “smarter,” meaning it’s increasingly able to produce meaningful results. GPT-4, the tool’s latest iteration, was touted by OpenAI as being 60 per cent less likely to give false information.

“We need to adapt and innovate, because the technology’s not going to stop,” says Osgoode Hall law Professor Pina D’Agostino (BA ’96; LLB ’99), who co-directs 91ɫ’s Centre for AI and Society. As a research and writing tool, ChatGPT “is a good start,” adds D’Agostino, who was recently named as vice-director of Connected Minds: Neural and Machine Systems for a Healthy, Just Society, a $318-million research project focused on AI. “But it’s not exhaustive, and it’s never going to replace someone actually doing the work.”

Creating and enforcing rules around students’ use of ChatGPT is happening in real time as 91ɫ navigates the current Wild West terrain of advanced AI. The University now has a webpage on AI technology and academic integrity that includes advice for instructors, including instructing students that unauthorized use of ChatGPT or similar platforms in assessments is a breach of academic honesty. It also touches on teaching and learning suggestions and the detecting of AI-generated content in student work, and shares links to relevant resources.

Recently, 91ɫ went a step further in these efforts by holding a professional development event on ChatGPT’s capabilities, limitations and educational uses. Organized by Sutherland-Harris with Angela Clark, academic integrity officer in the Office of the Vice-Provost Academic, the event was held in response to an influx of questions from faculty members across the institution.

Because of the unevenness of the landscape … people need to be very clear about what the expectations are for their students

— Markus Giesler

It included a two-hour panel discussion involving computer science Professor Marcus A. Brubaker of the Lassonde School of Engineering and sava saheli singh, a professor of digital futures in the Faculty of Education. Ideas for how to use ChatGPT to improve student experience at 91ɫ animated the session, yielding new approaches for giving assignments, for instance, and essay writing.

One suggestion was to ask students to develop thoughtful, well-informed prompts for ChatGPT that could yield a high-quality response, then assess it for accuracy and completeness. Another was to get students to generate alternate views to an essay argument, which would give them useful starting points for further exploration. University policy will need to keep evolving to provide clarity and align with the school’s code of conduct.

“Because of the unevenness of the landscape … people need to be very clear about what the expectations are for their students course by course, and not just put it in the syllabus and assume people will read it, but talk about it, you know, really drive it home,” Sutherland-Harris says.

Markus Giesler, a professor of marketing at the Schulich School of Business, researches the impact of new technologies on consumer behaviour. He says it’s important for the sector to consider the broader social implications of this innovation. “The product itself is not a technologically neutral or objective thing, but something that has built into it certain patterns of power relation,” says Giesler, co-author of the 2020 study “Consumers and Artificial Intelligence: An Experiential Perspective,” which identified the need for guidelines around AI and ethics in marketing.

A higher education world within which only the privileged students get the real human educator, whereas the less privileged students get the chatbot, is a kind of world that I would not want

Markus Giesler

As consumer-facing AI continues to become better at performing tasks that were once viewed as distinctly human, Giesler says universities may face more complex issues of access and equality.

“It’s actually not that far-fetched to assume that professions that are mainly about storytelling, truth seeking and articulation of language and fact could in the future be done by artificial intelligence,” he adds. “My concern is that a higher education world within which only the privileged students get the real human educator, whereas the less privileged students get the chatbot, is a kind of world that I would not want.”

To support students in producing original work, Professor D’Agostino recommends that course syllabi now include information on the strengths and weaknesses of ChatGPT, and how to properly cite the information it provides when used for academic assignments. She also sees a need to balance writing assignments with oral presentations and exams, so that students can develop their public speaking skills at a time when technology is infiltrating other spheres of their lives.

“We have to become better at evaluating students, helping them produce authentic work, and training them to be critical thinkers,” D’Agostino says. “But at the same time, there needs to be regulations and rules in place … and our core values need to remain solid.”

Article originally published in The 91ɫ Magazine, Summer 2023.

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In the media: How ChatGPT, other AI tools could change the way students learn /edu/2022/12/19/in-the-media-how-chatgpt-other-ai-tools-could-change-the-way-students-learn/ Mon, 19 Dec 2022 14:11:23 +0000 /edu/?p=34005 Lesley Wilton, an assistant professor of education at 91ɫ, weighs in on how artificial intelligence programs such as ChatGPT will affect learning.

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empty classroom with desks in a row and a world map on the back wall

Lesley Wilton, an assistant professor at 91ɫ who specializes in integrating technology into learning, said teaching AI skills will be an important aspect of future classes, especially in light of limitations.

A big mistake is bias. Programs like ChatGPT rely on existing information online, and as there are fewer records on a topic like Aboriginal history, AI could help to further erase certain voices.

“We want our students to understand that these tools exist but to think critically about them because the answers we receive from an application like ChatGPT may not reflect our community, our culture, they may not once true,” said Dr. Wilton.

Dr. Wilton also said that while ChatGPT could be used to cheat on short essays without detection, it will further push educators to develop other types of tasks, such as B. Digital or video presentations that focus on a student’s ability to summarize the wealth of information available online.

Read the full article (originally published in the Globe & Mail) on the .

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