ShelbyDawn57
Fae Princess
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2019
- Posts
- 4,067
All the discussion on AI, o thought I’d share this link…
https://time.com/7295195/ai-chatgpt-google-learning-school/
https://time.com/7295195/ai-chatgpt-google-learning-school/
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Hardly a surprise.All the discussion on AI, o thought I’d share this link…
https://time.com/7295195/ai-chatgpt-google-learning-school/
Thanks for posting this.All the discussion on AI, o thought I’d share this link…
https://time.com/7295195/ai-chatgpt-google-learning-school/
I'm not at all surprised. At the beginning, I refused to look at the Google AI results or to go to ChatGPT with questions, having experienced first hand hallucinatory answers. Then I began using them, but also looking at the google hits below and asking ChatGPT for references (which I didn't always check, I'm embarrassed to say, just like the dept of Health and Human Services...). Lately I go to ChatGPT first and think, "Well, that sounds reasonable. It's probably OK." Slippery slope. Slippery slope.All the discussion on AI, o thought I’d share this link…
https://time.com/7295195/ai-chatgpt-google-learning-school/
Interesting. Thanks for this.This seems like an article published for the purposes of confirmation bias. It's usually a bit of a red flag when 'scientists' send their results to the media before any independent corroboration has occurred. I'm not saying their results are necessarily wrong, but the study design doesn't seem very rigorous, so the odds may be high that it was conducted specifically to garner attention from a credulous audience before it can be debunked.
For one thing, they're measuring brain activity of people doing different activities (which sounds science-y) and suggesting that the observed discrepancies are profound, insofar as the cognitive activity of the people using the chatbot is less than the ones doing the essays with other tools. I think it's possible, perhaps even likely, that all their results show is that the ones who are only allowed to use the chatbot, and who eventually wind up using copy and paste, quickly learned that there isn't any point to exerting much effort on the task. Using the chatbot to try corroborating whatever it said the first time is an exercise in futility, so the most efficient and practical thing to do is just regurgitate whatever it says and get paid for your time, even if you know or suspect it's bad information. The fact that doing so doesn't light up the same parts of the brain as doing actual research is hardly surprising, nor does it mean that the people using the chatbot have been permanently impaired. They'd need to conduct a much longer study to have any relevant data for long-term issues, although I can't fault them for being concerned about the possibility.
It kind of reminds me of the tale (perhaps apocryphal) about the archaeologists who offered locals money for any ancient pots or pot sherds they found. The locals quickly realized that they could make more money by breaking any intact pots and selling the pieces. Did this really happen? Maybe. It has a fable-like quality to it, especially when used to illustrate the idea that people can be clever when it comes to figuring out what's best for them, and how easy it is to give them perverse incentives to ruin your study.
Good for you!!! My son and daughter-in-law have managed to keep phones away from their boys until this year when one graduated from middle school. Even now the plan is no phone after bed time. They caved years ago and allowed both boys to play MineCraft, on a time limited basis. But avid readers ended up abanding books for their games. One asked for a big thick book for Christmas.... a book about how to play MineCraft!!!!!!partly by keeping them free of digital media - at least until the upper grades.
Good for you!!! My son and daughter-in-law have managed to keep phones away from their boys until this year when one graduated from middle school. Even now the plan is no phone after bed time. They caved years ago and allowed both boys to play MineCraft, on a time limited basis. But avid readers ended up abanding books for their games. One asked for a big thick book for Christmas.... a book about how to play MineCraft!!!!!!
I was disappointed to learn recently that MineCraft can involve shooting and other violence. I don't know if it was available on the version my grandson showed me many years ago.The creativity of the MineCraft world was one of their key negotiating points when they were trying to get their first gaming console. Those kids, now young adults, still have a tenacious curiosity that they keep pursuing into fascinating vocations and avocations.
I wish I’d been raised that way instead of being told I didn’t fit whatever molds I was being pressed into by adults who never understood themselves, much less their children.
The new generations are being raised in a world far different from ours. AI is part of their reality. To me it’s critical that it doesn’t become their primary source of information.
I recently attended an online panel discussion presented by my alma mater bout AI in education. I was glad to hear that they were focusing on ways to teach students how to use it safely and productively instead of trying to figure out how to shield them from it.AI is part of their reality. To me it’s critical that it doesn’t become their primary source of information.
It reminds me of the furor over Wikipedia 20 years ago, and how students wouldn't be able to do research and think critically about sources.The new generations are being raised in a world far different from ours. AI is part of their reality. To me it’s critical that it doesn’t become their primary source of information.
I don't really remember that. I'm not saying it didn't happen, I just wasn't exposed to it.It reminds me of the furor over Wikipedia 20 years ago, and how students wouldn't be able to do research and think critically about sources.
Social media, apps, AI.... those are things children should be kept away from. Letting kids grow up in front of a screen is abuse.
Zero surprise at all!All the discussion on AI, o thought I’d share this link…
https://time.com/7295195/ai-chatgpt-google-learning-school/
Perverse incentivethe tale (perhaps apocryphal) about the archaeologists who offered locals money for any ancient pots or pot sherds they found. The locals quickly realized that they could make more money by breaking any intact pots and selling the pieces.
anecdote taken from the British Raj.[2][3] The British government, concerned about the number of venomous cobras in Delhi, offered a bounty for every dead cobra. Initially, this was a successful strategy; large numbers of snakes were killed for the reward. Eventually, however, people began to breed cobras for the income. When the government became aware of this, the reward program was scrapped. The cobra breeders set their snakes free, leading to an overall increase in the wild cobra population.
The 20th-century paleontologist G. H. R. von Koenigswald used to pay Javanese locals for each fragment of hominin skull that they produced. He later discovered that the people had been breaking up whole skulls into smaller pieces to maximize their payments. When he cancelled the payments, many locals burned the remaining skulls they had as retaliation.[42]
I surely do. It was occurring squarely in my high school and college years, and most teachers were vehemently anti-wikipedia. I remember several of them pontificating about it for entire periods on end. I couldn't help but internalize that to some extent, such was the prevalence of the sentiment in the mid naughties.I don't really remember that. I'm not saying it didn't happen, I just wasn't exposed to it.
Frankly, I'm forcefully suppressing my urge to lash out at this flippant misuse of the word abuse. That's about a hundred miles from what abuse is. Find a less fraught word with witch to spread your moral panic, please. Thanks.Letting kids grow up in front of a screen is abuse.
I don't really remember that. I'm not saying it didn't happen, I just wasn't exposed to it.