Schooled on AI

Just two states — California and Oregon — have issued policy guidance for schools on artificial intelligence platforms such as ChatGPTJennifer writes from a new report.

Why it matters: Teachers and administrators are eager for guidelines on how to use AI — and how to quash misuse. But the field is moving so rapidly that governments have been loath to issue pronouncements.

Driving the news: The Center on Reinventing Public Education (CRPE), a nonpartisan research center at Arizona State University, asked each of the 50 states and the District of Columbia to share their approach to AI guidance.

  • Only Californiaand Oregon issued official guidance for the current school year.
  • 11 states are currently developing guidance: Arizona, Connecticut, Maine, Mississippi, Nebraska, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Virginia and Washington.
  • 21 said they didn’t plan to offer guidance for the foreseeable future; 17 didn’t respond.

Details: AI in education is such a sprawling topic that it’s hard for educators and regulators to know what to tackle first.

  • It encompasses everything from teaching the subject in classrooms to using AI for school operations (scheduling, ordering supplies) to cracking down on plagiarism and kids using it to do their homework.
  • Current guidance focuses “on the ethical and equity implications of AI’s use, recommendations for teachers’ and students’ appropriate use of AI, and emerging best practices to enhance instruction,” per CRPE.

The intrigue: There’s a split between states that plan to issue AI guidance and those that want to let individual districts decide their own policies.

  • In the latter camp are Montana, Iowa, North Dakota and Wyoming.
  • By contrast, “North Carolina and Vermont acknowledge districts’ decision-making power, but are still developing guidance to inform their actions,” CRPE said.

What they’re saying: “We found that there was very little information that states were putting out,” says Bree Dusseault, principal and managing director at CRPE.

  • “We’ve defined it pretty broadly,” Dusseault tells Axios. “Really, what we’re looking for is any official statements or explanation of what AI is; how it might apply to the classroom; how schools, teachers or system leaders might be thinking of building effective or ethical use practices.”

Yes, but: There are guidelines out there for those who seek them out.

  • org, an education nonprofit, has put out a fairly comprehensive toolkitwith sample guidance on the use of AI.

State of play: While schools recognize the importance of teaching AI and allowing students to use it as a research tool, they’re perplexed about how to keep the genie properly in the bottle.

  • Examples of misuse abound. Boys at a New Jersey high school are accusedof circulating AI-generated nude images of female classmates, for instance.
  • Bias is also a concern, given that generative AI programs are trained on models that can filter information in wrong or inappropriate ways.
  • Teachers and administrators — who are short-staffed to begin with — are all at various stages of the AI learning curve.

Between the lines: AI technology is advancing so quickly that any guidelines for schools must be purposely vague and flexible, lest they grow obsolete quickly.

  • “We are hearing from our superintendents that it is a huge, ongoing and constantly evolving conversation,” said Noelle Ellerson Ng, associate executive director, advocacy and government, for AASA, the School Superintendents Association.
  • A lot of the experimentation is playing out in classrooms, she tells Axios. Teachers want to know, “How can you integrate AI into an immersive experience in every subject? How are we teaching them to use AI and have good ethics as academics?”
  • Teachers must emphasize that AI is “not an inherently bad tool,” but one that can be used to teach critical thinking, said Ellerson Ng. Students must learn to evaluate if a source is valid or not, she said.

The bottom line: AI is developing faster than school districts can establish training programs and guidelines — and while state guidelines may prove helpful, they’re not likely to be the final word.

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