91直播

Opinion
Science Opinion

Artificial Intelligence Is Around the Corner. Educators Should Take Note

Educators aren鈥檛 taking advantage of this still-early moment in AI development
By Michael Bennett 鈥 December 11, 2017 5 min read
BRIC ARCHIVE
  • Save to favorites
  • Print
Email Copy URL

December, 2027

A Plausible Near Future

One winter morning, a 5th grader will be awakened earlier than usual by Maestra, a commercially available virtual mentor that curates her comprehensive educational environment. Having monitored the child鈥檚 cognitive and emotional development since shortly after her conception, the artificial-intelligence program will accurately anticipate that the morning鈥檚 snowfall will add 10 minutes to the child鈥檚 typical walk to school. She adores fresh snow. During their morning dialogue over breakfast and the walk, the AI will reference The Snowy Day, a favorite storybook of the child鈥檚, having determined the intervention will induce an optimal psychological state for the school day鈥檚 lessons.

A district supervisor鈥檚 predawn jog will have just ended when her retina-draping augmented-reality device scribbles adjusted teacher and student attendance rates (-1.5 percent and -2 percent, respectively), modifications to the day鈥檚 projected energy consumption (an additional 200 kWh/school), recommended dietary adjustments for seven high-risk student populations scattered across 10 schools (reduced sugars for most, compensating for likely increases in morning stimulants), and last-minute wardrobe tips and talking points for a mid-morning video conference with principals (a blue-centric palette; bullish, data-driven forecasts for next fall鈥檚 funding). Attention split, she will almost slip on an ice patch, grumbling, 鈥淚 hate snowy days.鈥

Commentary Collection

BRIC ARCHIVE

In this special collection of Commentary essays, professors, advocates, and futurists challenge us all to deeply consider how schooling must change鈥攁nd change soon鈥攖o meet the needs of a future we cannot yet envision.

This special section is supported by a grant from the . 91直播 retained sole editorial control over the content of this package; the opinions expressed are the authors鈥 own, however.

Read more from the collection.

The student and the district supervisor in these fictional vignettes offer two possible scenarios of how the education community could soon be regulated by artificial-intelligence systems and devices. As a society, we must get used to the concept of 鈥渢echnological legislation,鈥 the notion that widely distributed technological systems and devices often govern our lives more effectively than local, state, or federal laws. To cope with the daunting societal implications of accelerating artificial-intelligence adoption, education leaders and policymakers must begin to consider with the questions these new technologies will raise for education.

As with the dissemination of so many new technologies in the modern era, the pace of societal uptake of AI is already quick and will likely quicken yet. And even if there were time to deliberate rationally about the most desirable approaches to integrating AI into primary and secondary education in the United States, we would still likely be encumbered by a major problem: We have an historical tendency to assess most technological innovations as politically neutral, capable of being used as equally for 鈥済ood鈥 or 鈥渂ad鈥 ends. In most instances, however, bias-free technological development seems impossible.

We can already see the limitations of this perspective in many discussions of the future significance of driverless automobiles, genetic engineering, or advanced manufacturing robotics鈥攄iscussions in which a misplaced faith in the neutrality of these technologies has led to many erroneous predictions. Instead of aiming for perfect neutrality, we should find ways to incorporate biases of egalitarianism, robust freedom, and dignity into AI design principles.

Historically, there have been several competing positions toward emergent technologies, which educators will have to confront in the coming years with the rise of AI. There is an eternally returning optimistic camp that can only see a New Jerusalem springing up in the wake of a vigorous adoption of new technology, while equally omnipresent doomsayers imagine that adoption spells apocalypse. Realists representing a third vociferous position often make the case for the inevitability of adoption, usually on pains of losing a technological arms race to a foreign competitor-adversary.

These simplistic viewpoints all offer little insight into new technologies themselves or into their proper forms and places in society. Our subsequent bafflement is compounded by wide-spread ignorance of鈥攅ven indifference about鈥攖he ways that most of our most essential technical systems actually work. Educators will need to resist succumbing to these faulty perspectives that reduce new technologies to 鈥済ood鈥 or 鈥渂ad,鈥 and instead genuinely grapple deeply with AI.

Artificial intelligence itself presents K-12 educators, managers of educational institutions, and education policymakers with a range of complex and often paradoxical problems. In the classroom, the questions will be challenging: What must curricula contain to educate students for AI-related work? How can they be taught the social and political implications of a world deeply penetrated by artificial minds?

Additionally, many forms of artificial intelligence based on what AI programmers call 鈥渕achine learning"鈥攖hat is, a computer鈥檚 ability to learn from experience rather than merely following explicit programming鈥攎ust be literally taught how to make sense of incoming data. The artificial-intelligence systems that AI researchers and corporations are building today would therefore benefit from an opportunity to tap the wisdom and expertise of our society鈥檚 most effective teachers to facilitate this learning. And, at the same time, AI could contribute to the better management of education institutions. Today鈥檚 teachers are failing to take advantage of this still-early moment in AI development to determine how best to teach these artificial pupils and to augment their classroom strategies with them. To effectively educate human students in a future where AI has become ubiquitous, it may be that educators need to start teaching artificially intelligent 鈥渟tudents鈥 in the present.

Education policymakers and administrators at the national, state, and municipal levels also need to collectively determine how best to integrate virtual assistants鈥攁 form of AI very likely to be widely distributed throughout the education system. In the opening vignette, for example, the district supervisor鈥檚 AI retina device arguably lacks sufficient privacy protections. And the scenario raises related questions: How can administrators, teachers, students, and parents effectively engage with interactive AIs to achieve mutually agreed upon outcomes? How can these stakeholders be assured that design biases are aligned with their desired political and social goals, as opposed to surreptitiously undermining them? What would it mean for professional educators to rigorously engage in the education of AI systems in ways consistent with our society鈥檚 deepest held commitments to liberty, equality, and human dignity?

Ultimately, there remains a disturbing irony for the American education system: The longer the country muddles along accepting overly simplistic descriptions of complex technological systems, the more difficult it becomes to have informed, democratic deliberations about AI. At the same time, well-deployed AI could materially assist us jump-starting such deliberations by augmenting individuals鈥 and communities鈥 decision-making capacities. Students, teachers, and administrators can and should play major roles in solving these thorny puzzles of the AI era.

Coverage of science learning and career pathways is supported in part by a grant from The Noyce Foundation, at . 91直播 retains sole editorial control over the content of this coverage.
A version of this article appeared in the December 13, 2017 edition of 91直播 as It鈥檚 Time to Start Taking AI Seriously

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of 91直播's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Student Well-Being Webinar
Improve School Culture and Engage Students: Archery鈥檚 Critical Role in Education
Changing lives one arrow at a time. Find out why administrators and principals are raving about archery in their schools.
Content provided by 
School Climate & Safety Webinar Engaging Every Student: How to Address Absenteeism and Build Belonging
Gain valuable insights and practical solutions to address absenteeism and build a more welcoming and supportive school environment.
Student Well-Being K-12 Essentials Forum Social-Emotional Learning 2025: Examining Priorities and Practices
Join this free virtual event to learn about SEL strategies, skills, and to hear from experts on the use and expansion of SEL programs.

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide 鈥 elementary, middle, high school and more.
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.

Read Next

Science Leader To Learn From Computer Science for All: This District Leader Is Making It a Reality
An initiative to create and expand a computer science program pays big dividends in a Colorado district.
13 min read
Anna Otto, Computer Science and Online Learning Coordinator for Adams 12 Five Star Schools, and her 9-year-old son, Aiden, who was born prematurely at 28 weeks and lives with cerebral palsy, pictured at home in Longmont, Colo., in Dec. 17, 2024.
Anna Otto, the computer science and online learning coordinator for the Adams 12 Five Star school district in Colorado, and her 9-year-old son, Aiden, who was born prematurely at 28 weeks and lives with cerebral palsy, at home in Longmont, Colo., on Dec. 17, 2024. Otto's passion for computer science is inspired, in part, by the role it has played in her son's ability to walk independently.
Jimena Peck for 91直播
Science Q&A Closing the Gender Gap in Computer Science Starts With Student Input
Girls are less likely to take computer science then their male peers. Designing classes that appeal to them can help close the gap.
4 min read
Anna Otto, Computer Science and Online Learning Coordinator for Adams 12 Five Star Schools, visits a 5th grade class at Glacier Peak Elementary School in Brighton, Colo., on Dec. 9, 2024. Otto leads the development of the district's K-12 computer science pathway, integrates digital literacy into core subjects, and collaborates on creating AI guidelines and professional learning initiatives for the district.
Anna Otto, the computer science and online learning coordinator for the Adams 12 Five Star school district in suburban Denver, visits a 5th grade class at Glacier Peak Elementary School in Brighton, Colo., on Dec. 9, 2024.
Jimena Peck for 91直播
Science LEGO Education鈥檚 Latest Offering: The Building Blocks of Science Lessons?
The toymaker plans to release units that inch closer to a core curriculum.
3 min read
Lego Classroom
Courtesy of LEGO Education
Science The STEM Stereotypes That Hold Students Back Aren't What You Think
Girls may not underrate their math performance compared to boys, after all. But math-oriented sciences are a different matter.
3 min read
Two Female College Students Building Machine In Science Robotics Or Engineering Class
iStock/Getty