
Artificial intelligence and education
Description
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Ensuring that AI empowers educators and learners, not over-empowers them, and that future developments and practices are truly for the common good.
Artificial intelligence (Al) is increasingly having an impact on education, bringing opportunities as well as numerous challenges. These observations were noted by the Council of Europe's Committee of Ministers in 2019 and led to the commissioning of this report, which sets out to examine the connections between Al and education (AI&ED). In particular, the report presents an overview of AI&ED seen through the lens of the Council of Europe values of human rights, democracy and the rule of law; and it provides a critical analysis of the academic evidence and the myths and hype.
The Covid-19 pandemic school shutdowns triggered a rushed adoption of educational technology, which increasingly includes AI-assisted classrooms tools (AIED). This AIED, which by definition is designed to influence child development, also impacts on critical issues such as privacy, agency and human dignity - all of which are yet to be fully explored and addressed. But AI&ED is not only about teaching and learning with AI, but also teaching and learning about AI (AI literacy), addressing both the technological dimension and the often-forgotten human dimension of AI.
The report concludes with a provisional needs analysis - the aim being to stimulate further critical debate by the Council of Europe's member states and other stakeholders and to ensure that education systems respond both proactively and effectively to the numerous opportunities and challenges introduced by AI&ED.
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Content
- Intro
- Title page
- Contents
- Definitions
- Executive summary
- Introduction
- PART I. The connections between AI and education
- 1.1. Defining AI
- 1.2. The connections between AI and education
- 1.3. Learning with AI
- 1.3.1. Learner-supporting AI
- 1.3.2. Teacher-supporting AI
- 1.3.3. Institution-supporting AI
- 1.4. Using AI to learn about learning
- 1.4.1. Digital traces
- 1.4.2. What commercial organisations are learning
- 1.5. Learning about AI (AI literacy)
- 1.5.1. Two dimensions of AI literacy
- 1.5.2. The purpose of education
- 1.5.3. What should be learned about AI
- 1.5.4. Where is AI being taught, to whom and by whom?
- 1.5.5. AI literacy: the technological dimension
- 1.5.6. AI literacy: the human dimension
- PART II. Some challenges for AI and education
- 2.1. AI and learners
- 2.1.1. AI applications and pedagogy
- 2.1.2. AI applications and identifying learners at risk
- 2.1.3. AI applications and the developing brain
- 2.1.4. AI applications and learner agency
- 2.1.5. AI applications for children with disabilities
- 2.1.6. AI applications and parents
- 2.1.7. AI applications as "high-risk"
- 2.1.8. AI applications and emotion
- 2.1.9. AI and digital safeguarding
- 2.2. The ethics of AI and education
- 2.2.1. The ethics of AI
- 2.2.2. The ethics of AI is necessary but not sufficient for AI in education
- 2.2.3. AI loyalty
- 2.3. AI and the educational ecosystem
- 2.3.1. Political and economic drivers
- 2.3.2. Evaluating AI in education
- 2.3.3. AIED colonialism
- PART III. AI, education, human rights, democracy and the rule of law
- 3.1. AI, education and human rights
- 3.1.1. What is meant by human rights
- 3.1.2. International agreements
- 3.1.3. Human rights of children
- 3.1.4. Human rights, AI and education
- 3.1.5. Remedies and redress
- 3.2 AI, education and democracy
- 3.2.1. What is meant by democracy
- 3.2.2. Democracy and AI
- 3.2.3. Democracy and AI in education
- 3.2.4. Critical reflections
- 3.3. AI, education and the rule of law
- 3.3.1. What is meant by the rule of law
- 3.3.2. International legal frameworks
- 3.3.3. Research on AI in education and the rule of law
- 3.3.4. Applying the rule of law to AI in educational practice
- 3.3.5. Critical reflections
- PART IV. Conclusion and a needs analysis
- 4.1. Conclusion
- 4.2. A needs analysis
- References
- Appendix I. Definitions of AI
- Appendix II. Recent related. Council of Europe reports
- Appendix III. Recent related reports from other institutions
- Appendix IV. Reviews of AIED research
- Appendix V. Some examples of student-supporting. AIED tools
- About the authors
- Copyright
- Table of contents
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