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Molly Stern's avatar

This morning’s NY Times Daily episode has an interview with a professor that likens reading an AI generated discussion post to being a duck who swims up to a wooden duck decoy and tries to mate with it. I think that’s an apt description of an issue that you are surfacing here about humans needing to learn by connecting with other humans. As an instructional coach, I have noticed that participation is lower in classes when teachers ask questions in a way that makes it so that it doesn’t matter who answers the question, whereas students participate more eagerly when questions are asked in a way that indicates that the teachers wants to understand the ideas particular to individuals in the class. I wonder how the presence of an all-knowing robot expert might impact students’ willingness and eagerness to share their own mathematical thinking and ideas...

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Sarah Sirois's avatar

It's comforting to read this view coming from a highly respected and frontrunner math educator. You make valid points Dan; thank you for sharing them. I agree that we must proceed with great caution regarding AI chatbots, not only in education, but in all of life. Human connections are what give us reason to live and learn; they are what allow us to feel and understand and fulfill our purposes on this earth. Let us remember that today's children are tomorrow's leaders, and we must be very careful not to replace their human relationships with robots.

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