Educational Psychology & Emerging Technologies: Critical Perspectives and Updates
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Educational Psychology & Emerging Technologies: Critical Perspectives and Updates
This curated collection includes updates, resources, and research with critical perspectives related to the intersections of educational psychology and emerging technologies in education. The page also serves as a research tool to organize online content (funnel shaped icon allows keyword search). For more on the intersections of privatization and technologization of education with critiques of the social impact finance and related technologies, please visit http://bit.ly/sibgamble and http://bit.ly/chart_look. For posts regarding screen time risks to health and development, see http://bit.ly/screen_time and for updates related to AI and data concerns, please visit http://bit.ly/DataJusticeLinks.   [Note: Views presented on this page are re-shared from external websites.  The content may not necessarily represent the views nor official position of the curator nor employer of the curator.
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Time for a Pause: Without Effective Public Oversight, AI in Schools Will Do More Harm Than Good // National Education Policy Center 

Key Takeaway: The current wholesale adoption of unregulated Artificial Intelligence applications in schools poses a grave danger to democratic civil society and to individual freedom and liberty.

Find Documents:

NEPC Publication: https://nepc.colorado.edu/publication/ai

Publication Announcement: https://nepc.colorado.edu/publication-announcement/2024/03/ai

Contact:
Michelle Renée Valladares: (720) 505-1958, michelle.valladares@colorado.edu
Ben Williamson: 011-44-0131-651-6176, ben.williamson@ed.ac.uk

 

BOULDER, CO (MARCH 5, 2024)
Disregarding their own widely publicized appeals for regulating and slowing implementation of artificial intelligence (AI), leading tech giants like Google, Microsoft, and Meta are instead racing to evade regulation and incorporate AI into their platforms. 

 

A new NEPC policy brief, Time for a Pause: Without Effective Public Oversight, AI in Schools Will Do More Harm Than Good, warns of the dangers of unregulated AI in schools, highlighting democracy and privacy concerns. Authors Ben Williamson of the University of Edinburgh, and Alex Molnar and Faith Boninger of the University of Colorado Boulder, examine the evidence and conclude that the proliferation of AI in schools jeopardizes democratic values and personal freedoms.

Public education is a public and private good that’s essential to democratic civic life. The public must, therefore, be able to provide meaningful direction over schools through transparent democratic governance structures. Yet important discussions about AI’s potentially negative impacts on education are being overwhelmed by relentless rhetoric promoting its purported ability to positively transform teaching and learning. The result is that AI, with little public oversight, is on the verge of becoming a routine and overriding presence in schools.

Years of warnings and precedents have highlighted the risks posed by the widespread use of pre-AI digital technologies in education, which have obscured decision-making and enabled student data exploitation. Without effective public oversight, the introduction of opaque and unproven AI systems and applications will likely exacerbate these problems.

The authors explore the harms likely if lawmakers and others do not step in with carefully considered regulations. Integration of AI can degrade teacher-student relationships, corrupt curriculum with misinformation, encourage student performance bias, and lock schools into a system of expensive corporate technology. Further, they contend, AI is likely to exacerbate violations of student privacy, increase surveillance, and further reduce the transparency and accountability of educational decision-making.

 

The authors advise that without responsible development and regulation, these opaque AI models and applications will become enmeshed in routine school processes. This will force students and teachers to become involuntary test subjects in a giant experiment in automated instruction and administration that is sure to be rife with unintended consequences and potentially negative effects. Once enmeshed, the only way to disentangle from AI would be to completely dismantle those systems.

The policy brief concludes by suggesting measures to prevent these extensive risks. Perhaps most importantly, the authors urge school leaders to pause the adoption of AI applications until policymakers have had sufficient time to thoroughly educate themselves and develop legislation and policies ensuring effective public oversight and control of its school applications.

 

Find Time for a Pause: Without Effective Public Oversight, AI in Schools Will Do More Harm Than Good, by Ben Williamson, Alex Molnar, and Faith Boninger, at:
http://nepc.colorado.edu/publication/ai

_______

Suggested Citation: Williamson, B., Molnar, A., & Boninger, F. (2024). Time for a pause: Without effective public oversight, AI in schools will do more harm than good. Boulder, CO: National Education Policy Center. Retrieved [date] from http://nepc.colorado.edu/publication/ai

 

For original link to announcement, please see: 
https://nepc.colorado.edu/publication-announcement/2024/03/ai 

 

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What Test Scores Don't Tell Us: The Naked Emperor | Psychology Today

What Test Scores Don't Tell Us: The Naked Emperor | Psychology Today | Educational Psychology & Emerging Technologies: Critical Perspectives and Updates | Scoop.it

Why educational test scores don't tell us what we think they do...
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/young-minds/201210/what-test-scores-dont-tell-us-the-naked-emperor
 


Via Jennifer Lubanski, Gina Stepp, Roxana Marachi, PhD
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Think Pedagogy First, Technology Second - TeachThought

Think Pedagogy First, Technology Second - TeachThought | Educational Psychology & Emerging Technologies: Critical Perspectives and Updates | Scoop.it

From TeachThought blog:
"We’ve talked before about the role of technology in the learning process–mainly because we’re still trying to–as a field, industry, and culture–come to grips with its pitfalls and potential.

* The stages of technology integration:
http://www.teachthought.com/technology/4-stages-the-integration-of-technology-in-learning/  
 

* And the right and the wrong way to use technology for learning.
http://www.teachthought.com/technology/the-right-and-wrong-way-to-use-technology-for-learning/
 

* Tips for smarter technology use.
http://www.teachthought.com/technology/5-secrets-for-smarter-education-technology-integration/"
 

"Clearly this is a topic that’s on the minds of educators that want the best for students, but also want to resist reckless, en vogue adoption.

In that context, the following infographic from Krista Moroder offers another simple piece of advice: thinking pedagogy first, technology second. We might revise that statement to include other approaches beyond pedagogy–including heutagogy, giving us something like “Think learning goals first, technology second,” you get the idea.

Technology is a tool–a platform, a tactic, a strategy, and a space, but–unless you’re teaching a technology class–never an end.

You can find an editable version of the graphic (under CC licensing) here: https://docs.google.com/a/sjsu.edu/drawings/d/1FjgMrO6d_3B6NBFLhteCjP5EGWaZymOYIRrWtJLt8PY/edit  

For full post, please click on title above or here:
http://www.teachthought.com/technology/think-pedagogy-first-technology-second/   

 


Via Gust MEES, Allan Shaw, Dean J. Fusto
Rachel Vartanian's curator insight, March 28, 2014 4:40 PM

EdTech is about education: student learning and outcomes. 

Jimena Acebes Sevilla's curator insight, August 18, 2014 8:33 PM

Primero la pedagogía, después la tecnología.

Stéphane Bataillard's curator insight, August 24, 2014 1:26 PM

A méditer...

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6 Ways For Teachers To Effectively Use Social Media

6 Ways For Teachers To Effectively Use Social Media | Educational Psychology & Emerging Technologies: Critical Perspectives and Updates | Scoop.it

Using social media inside the classroom can be extremely effective. Increase productivity, communication, and understanding by using these six tips.

 

 


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