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Understand the Implications of Generative AI in Education

Bans aren’t the answer, but what is?

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Generative AI is disrupting models across industries, and classrooms around the world are already grappling with the change. Concerns have been raised about its effects on education and student learning, with cheating being a primary concern.

Yet, getting past the concerns and looking to the future, generative AI can transform education just as past technologies such as calculators and the internet have. IT will have to guide the response to generative AI, which will have implications from the classroom experience to the institution’s policies.

Implications for IT leaders in the short, medium, and long term

IT and business leaders will need to be strategic and address the concerns and questions of educators who want to limit cheating and executives who want to know the policy implications for generative AI tools.

  1. Limit risks more effectively: IT leaders can provide more meaningful solutions than bans or plagiarism detection tools that don’t work.
  2. Extract value across the board: Students, faculty, and administrative staff can benefit from the value generative AI has to offer when it’s embedded strategically.
  3. Prepare for legislation and policy building: IT leaders will have the mandate to build clear internal policies and help comply with new legislation on generative AI.

Understand the Implications of Generative AI in Education Research & Tools

1. Understand the implications of Generative AI in Education Storyboard - Generative AI threatens to upend the world of Education. IT should be prepared to address its risks and opportunities.

AI has the potential to transform the classroom just as calculators, the internet, and digital assets changed the way we taught and learned in the past. Educators may have no choice but to embrace generative AI and leverage its strengths to enhance learning and development.

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Understand the Implications of Generative AI in Education

Bans aren't the answer

Analyst Perspective

Guide the appropriate use of generative AI in teaching, learning, and working.

Generative AI has emerged as a prominent technology, garnering substantial attention in a very short time. The advanced functionality of generative AI for searching and creating content has raised concerns about its implications in education. Info-Tech Research Group has undertaken an examination of the impact of generative AI on education, offering insights into the future implications for educators, students, and IT professionals.

The use of generative AI raises concerns about its effects on education and student learning, with cheating being a primary concern. Nonetheless, the technology has the potential to transform the classroom just as calculators, the internet, and digital assets changed the way we taught and learned in the past. Educators may have no choice but to embrace generative AI and leverage its strengths to enhance learning and development.

Mark Maby, Research Director for Education, Industry Practice

Mark Maby
Research Director for Education, Industry Practice
Info-Tech Research Group

Understand the implications of generative AI in education

Generative AI

  • ChatGPT reached 100 million users in just two months after launching.
  • ChatGPT is generative AI, and like other technologies before, it will have substantial ramifications on education.
  • Understand the implications of generative AI in the short, middle and long term.
Short term Mid term Long term

The response to cheating:

  • Blocking ChatGPT is not the answer.
  • Plagiarism prevention tools are ineffective.
  • IT can support through device management software and computer labs.

Benefits to education:

  • Students will use generative AI in the workplace and the curriculum should reflect this.
  • Faculty can leverage generative AI to reduce their administrative burden.
  • Administrative staff can benefit as well, but they are worried it will take their jobs.

Long term

  • An internal policy for AI will be a top priority for CIOs.
  • Legislation on AI will likely include compliance requirements for education.

Identify high-value processes

  • Identify your capabilities that support key business processes based on the whether they are conversational, repeatable, and valuable.
  • Build a heatmap, highlighting areas where a generative AI solution could be effective.

Info-Tech Insight
IT will need to provide guidance on the proper response to generative AI, which will change how we teach, learn, and work in education.

OpenAI and ChatGPT: An overview

“I think it's incumbent on those of you in IT … to spread the word broadly, not in a semester, but now. We need to let our clients know what this is, what the future is likely to be, and how they may use it without jeopardizing the quality or rigor of their teaching.”
Ray Schroeder on ChatGPT,
UPCEA Senior Fellow and UIS Professor Emeritus (Educause, January 30, 2023).

1ChatGPT (generative pretrained transformer) was created by OpenAI, a non-profit set-up in 2015 (Web Archive, April 27, 2016). Since 2019 Microsoft has been a major investor in OpenAI’s for-profit subsidiary (CNBC, January 10, 2023).
2GPT 3.0 expresses a 175 billion parameter neural network (Towards Data Science). This level of sophistication can only be created by organizations with billions of dollars of funding.
3GPT uses three approaches to machine learning:
  • Unsupervised learning where text examples are untagged.
  • Supervised learning models the neural network on human behavior .
  • Reinforcement learning uses human ranking to inform output quality (Towards Data Science).
4ChatGPT (GPT 3.5) is specifically designed to serve a chatbot function. Its logic abilities are likely augmented by Codex, OpenAI’s coding tool (OpenAI).
5ChatGPT is generative AI; unlike your standard chatbot, which excels at executing basic workflows, ChatGPT can create new content based on inputs.
6ChatGPT reached 100 million users in just two months after launching (Reuters, February 2, 2023).

Short term tactics: ChatGPT and Cheating

What have been the responses to ChatGPT among faculty and leadership at your institution?

Blocking sites on the institution’s network
Prominent institutions have blocked ChatGPT on their network. This has mostly been at the K-12 level, including New York City PS in the US and Queensland and NSW in Australia (Education Week). Sciences Po in France is an example at the university level (Reuters, January 27, 2023).
Limited Effectiveness: 95% of students have mobile phones to access ChatGPT (Pew Research Center).
Risks: Prevents creative use of the tool by innovative teachers.

Plagiarism-detection tools
Tools can assess authenticity of a text as human-written or AI-generated. Turnitin is a prominent example but there are other tools, including one offered by OpenAI. The company is even an attempting to statistically “watermark” its output (TechCrunch).
Limited Effectiveness: These tools provide a confidence metric, and AI will likely improve its “naturalness”.
Risks: These tools come with their own privacy issues. Also, students will become suspicious of their teachers who act suspicious toward them.

Blocking sites at the level of the device
Higher education testing centers and labs can be used as dedicated centers for written assessment where access to ChatGPT is blocked.
For instructors grappling with flagrant use this may be an option.
More effective ways of assessment likely exist, such as oral discussion.

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Author

Mark Maby

Contributors

  • Xavi Herce, Chief Revenue Officer at Fermat / Batou XYZ
  • Matt MacLeod, Embedded Firmware Engineer at Rainhouse Canada
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