A look into the future: the digital revolution and the classroom
Maria Stefanecz
The digital revolution is rapidly changing the world we live in; how will it affect the classroom?
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Technology can be, and is increasingly, used for student and teacher assessment and monitoring (ex.:No More Marking, Geekie), virtual mentoring and teaching of particular skills. (ex.:Mindspark, Siyavula Practice, Teach to One, Byju), It also helps to connect formal and informal learning settings and offer options of mobile and e-learning (ex.:edX, Udacity, Coursera, Lynda.com). A growing number of schools in Western countries are also incorporating artificial intelligence (AI) into their core curriculum. Examples in the US include such schools as Khan Lab School, the network of AltSchools and Summit Public Schools.[4]
Digital technologies are
fundamentally changing the way people live, work, learn and socialise today. [1] Increasingly sophisticated interactions
between technologies and students and teachers, as well as the growing hype
around their application in education, is delivering a promise of more
“personalised” or “adaptive” learning (eg. ALEKS, Knewton, DreamBox). This
addresses one of the main critiques of the current education model; namely, the
lack of a personalised approach to students’ needs.[4,5]
Technology can be, and is increasingly, used for student and teacher assessment and monitoring (ex.:No More Marking, Geekie), virtual mentoring and teaching of particular skills. (ex.:Mindspark, Siyavula Practice, Teach to One, Byju), It also helps to connect formal and informal learning settings and offer options of mobile and e-learning (ex.:edX, Udacity, Coursera, Lynda.com). A growing number of schools in Western countries are also incorporating artificial intelligence (AI) into their core curriculum. Examples in the US include such schools as Khan Lab School, the network of AltSchools and Summit Public Schools.[4]
Experts generally agree that
Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) through artificial
intelligence (AI) and big data for learning analytics (machine learning) could
provide opportunities for better management and stronger evidence based
approaches to development and implementation at scale of educational policies.[2]
The reasons for optimism rely on
some positive results obtained and the enthusiasm of investors for the edtech
industry, which has an estimated potential to grow in value from $75bn in 2014
to $120bn in 2019 in the North American and European markets.[4] To illustrate
positive results, research at the US Summit Public Schools (11 schools and 130
more “partner schools”) found in 2015, that students exposed to AI at the Summit
Schools had 10% higher school completion rate compared to other public schools.
Also, ⅔ of the Summit students obtained higher math test results than their
peers from regular schools. As another example, a J-PAL review of India’s
after-school scheme found that the progress made in language and maths by
pupils was greater than in almost any study of education in poor countries for
a fraction of the cost of attending a government-run school.
However, judging the impact of
technology is not simple for several reasons:
1) difficulty of predicting the
outcomes of the application at scale;
2) focus on the positive and
difficulties of giving visibility to negative results;
3) deviations in outcomes: lack
of homogeneity of positive effect between the students (Mindspark), unstable
results year to year (Teach One), varied impact between schools (DreamBox).
The cost of education in tech advanced schools is a
challenge. Attending the Altschools in the US costs parents $27,000 per year,
more than twice the average spending per pupil in OECD countries. The price
could be even more of an obstacle for parents and governments in poorer
countries, taking into account the fact that to-date, 53% of the world’s population
is still offline. [1]
Other challenges relate to
issues of privacy as well as accountability and transparency in the use of AI.
Since machine learning relies on the collection of big data to
produce results, there is a question as to how the privacy of participants can
be protected and how it can be ensured that the data will be used responsibly
and ethically. The harm which the non-transparent and unaccountable use of
algorithms might produce can be seen in the example of The Value-Added Model
which was used for decades in the US to assess teachers’ performance. It took
years before teachers in courts could prove that the secretive system had flaws
meanwhile their tenure and pay was determined predominantly by it. [6,7] To better
understand the nature of algorithms listen to the TED Talk by Cathy
O’Neil, author of “Weapons of Math
Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy” [3]:
To address these challenges, researches at UNESCO argue for:
ethics, transparency, accountability; guiding principles for procurement of AI
systems; more accessible and open AI platforms to increase competition;
capacity building for students, parents and policymakers to develop data
literacy, critical thinking, creativity, social skills and emotional
intelligence, digital citizenship and digital design; and elaboration of a shared
vision among all education stakeholders as to the policies implemented. [2]
The wheels of technological progress are hard to stop.
Technology in education can be used to increase learning outcomes and help free
up teacher’s time to provide more personalized assistance to students.
Alternatively, it can exacerbate inequalities and turn classrooms into tech
labs where tech start-ups are highly paid for experiments on children and
teachers. It is high time policymakers and parents become alert to the
issue and ensure that the right policies are put in place and actions are taken
to lead the change and not to fall victim to it.
Technologies develop and assess human skills but what about human nature? AI can help students to collect data, to make assessment but is it able to make them fall in love with the subject being studied? It is not about efficiency, it is about feelings. Even very effective interaction with AI will always lose the passion discussion with real mentor.
ReplyDeletePerseus,
DeleteThank you for your comment! It is very interesting. Indeed, I agree with you that teacher's role in enticing the interest to learning cannot be substituted by the AI. Maybe one of the best scenario would be if technology could really free-up time for teachers to interact more with students and motivate their curiosity and also give hints on what are needs of a particular student.
I am afraid it is not a teacher who will difine the role of AI in the process but it is rather AI will put a teacher on his place ...:)
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ReplyDeleteThe digital revolution has transformed classrooms worldwide, offering exciting opportunities for interactive learning. schools in BTM Layout are embracing this trend, integrating technology to enhance education and prepare students for the future.
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