The expanded use of artificial intelligence in K-12 education this school year is prompting very strong feelings, from calling it the 鈥淭erminator鈥 to telling people to get hip, because 鈥渋t鈥檚 here to stay.鈥
Educators are also creating new approaches to balance the benefits and drawbacks of the new technology. Fewer seem to be calling for outright bans on large language models like ChatGPT, recognizing that students will have to learn how to use AI in future jobs. Still, many are worried that AI, unchecked, could lead to lazier students and much more cheating.
What is clear is that educators are hungry for guidance from their schools, districts, and states on how to use AI for instruction. But they say they are not getting that guidance.
鈥淚 was asking for a district policy for student use of AI last spring and was brushed off,鈥 said a Minnesota social studies teacher in the open-ended response section of an EdWeek Research Center survey conducted last fall. 鈥淭eachers shouldn鈥檛 be left out in the wind on this issue.鈥
In that survey of educators from across the country, scores of respondents weighed in on the role of AI in education. 澳门跑狗论坛 pulled the 25 responses it felt best represented the wide array of feelings and ideas about how to use AI effectively. Some of those responses were edited for length and clarity.
Here鈥檚 what they had to say:
鈥擧igh school teacher (social studies/humanities/civics/history) | Maryland
鈥擧igh school teacher (English language arts/literacy/reading) | Texas
鈥擧igh school science teacher | New York
鈥擠istrict-level administrator (curriculum and instruction) | New Jersey
鈥擧igh school principal | New Jersey
鈥擧igh school teacher (Bilingual education/English as a second language) | Nebraska
鈥擧igh school teacher (social studies/humanities/civics/history) | Michigan
鈥擬iddle school teacher (computer applications) | Illinois
鈥擧igh school teacher (math/computer science/data science) | Texas
鈥擬iddle school science teacher | Colorado
鈥擧igh school teacher (world/foreign languages) | South Dakota
鈥擧igh school teacher (special education math) | Georgia
鈥擧igh school teacher (social studies/humanities/civics/history) | Minnesota
鈥擬iddle school teacher (special education) | Michigan
鈥擧igh school science teacher | North Carolina
鈥擧igh school teacher (social studies/humanities/civics/history) | California
鈥擡lementary school teacher | Wisconsin
鈥擡lementary school teacher | Oregon
鈥擧igh school fine arts teacher | Texas
鈥擧igh school teacher (career and technical education) | Florida
鈥擧igh school teacher (social studies/humanities/civics/history) | Indiana
鈥擠istrict-level administrator (special education) | Arkansas
鈥擬iddle school principal | Georgia
鈥擬iddle school teacher (math/computer science/data science) | Georgia
鈥擧igh school teacher (English language arts/literacy/reading) | Connecticut
Data analysis for this article was provided by the EdWeek Research Center. Learn more about the center鈥檚 work.