Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Kate Fisher's avatar

I think the most important distinction between AI and a human teacher is that students don’t ask complete and intelligible questions all the time. In your comments above, you posed questions that were formatted to what AI might expect. You gave the full equation in asking your question. However, it’s the questions of students who are unclear and don’t understand the conventions of mathematics, or possibly the conventions of English, whose questions are likely to pose a problem for AI. If a student tries to ask, “Why do you plus the 3 and not minus the 3?” then the bot doesn’t have the context to answer the question. Human teachers, on the other hand, can use their eyes and experience to not only correct the student’s language gently, but also to know the context without having to ask. We can also see students’ writing and get an idea of where a student is making their mistakes to help us ask the right questions. Not that AI couldn’t evolve to read text or respond to visual stimuli, but I have to figure it will take more than a few years for the programming to be developed that would help a bot to read the writing of some students.

Expand full comment
Rafu's avatar

I think that in reality AI and human teacher will form a team. AI acts as an assistant to humans rather than replacing complete jobs. To do this you only need to succeed at the first two, the other helps but may not be necessary. Take a look at Amy.app if you are interested in this, I think they have the closest product to this on the market.

Expand full comment
10 more comments...

No posts