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Eduaction in the Age of Articial Intelligence (The UNESCO Courier no. 4, October-December 2023)
Place of publication | Year of publication | Collation: 
Paris | 2023 | 45 p.
ISBN/ISSN: 
ISSN 2220-2285 (eng);
ISSN 2220-2269 (fre);
ISSN 2220-2307 (spa);
ISSN 2096-4064 (chi);
ISSN 2220-2323 (rus);
ISSN 2220-3540 (ara)
Corporate author: 
UNESCO
Region: 
Global

At a time when the field of education is in worldwide ferment, a single instructional phenomenon has captured the attention not only of professionals but of laymen.” Does the innovation in question refer to artificial intelligence (AI), or to the use of augmented reality in the classroom? Neither one. This quote is from an article in The UNESCO Courier about “teaching machines”, a set of programmes developed in the USA to guide students in their learning. It dates back to… March 1965.

 

Which just goes to show that pondering the role of computers in learning is nothing new. Whether lauded or decried, technologies are increasingly part of the school landscape, at least in industrialized countries. Digital learning games, online tutorials or massive open online courses (MOOCs) have become a reality for a growing number of pupils and students. The COVID-19 pandemic has only accelerated the phenomenon, spurring the rise, including in Africa, of companies specializing in digital educational services, the so-called “edtechs”.

 

Yet no matter how sophisticated these technologies may be, they have not challenged the founding principle of a teacher giving a class simultaneously to a group of students. Artificial intelligence could be a game-changer. Does the arrival of content-generating tools like ChatGPT and intelligent tutorials mean the oft-heralded revolution has started? In any case, the use of generative AI in learning presents unprecedented challenges to education systems.

 

As UNESCO’s Global Education Monitoring Report 2023 highlights, these new tools can prove invaluable in providing personalized support for students, particularly those with disabilities or living in remote areas. But they also raise questions about the digital divide, data confidentiality and the preponderance of major global corporations in this sector. And for the moment, safeguards are lacking.

 

It is therefore urgent that regulations be adopted to ensure the use of AI in education remains human-centred, in the best interests of students. To support this, UNESCO published in September 2023 the first-ever Guidance for generative AI in education and research, designed to address the disruptions caused by these technologies. It complements other tools produced by the Organization, including the Recommendation on the ethics of artificial intelligence and a guidance for policy-makers on AI and education, both published in 2021.

Resource Type: 
Research papers / journal articles
Theme: 
Media & information literacy / digital citizenship
Level of education: 
Primary education
Secondary education
Higher education
Keywords: 
Artificial intelligence
ethics of technology
Искусственный интеллект
Этика технологий
ИИ
Intelligence artificielle
Ethique de la technologie