Personalized chatbot tutors will likely revolutionize traditional education and benefit students: AI expert
OpenAI has already partnered with an education nonprofit to test a virtual tutor program
Fox News | By Emma Colton | July 13, 2023
AI-powered chatbot tutors will likely revolutionize traditional education and benefit students with one-on-one training, according to a University of California, Berkeley professor of computer science.
ChatGPT has already made its mark among students, as younger generations rushed to use the chatbot that can mimic human conversation when it was released last year. Berkeley professor and leading AI expert Stuart Russell speculates that as the technology evolves, it could revolutionize traditional education with ChatGPT-style personalized tutors.
“Education is the biggest benefit that we can look for in the next few years,” Russell told the Guardian of AI’s potential impact on education. “It ought to be possible within a few years, maybe by the end of this decade, to be delivering a pretty high quality of education to every child in the world. That’s potentially transformative.”
Russell, who was in Geneva last week for the UN’s AI for Good Global Summit, argued that personalized chatbots could possibly cover “most material through to the end of high school” for students, all from their cell phone or computer.
Russell said studies show that one-on-one tutoring is two or three times more beneficial to students compared to traditional classroom learning. He told the Guardians that there will likely be “reasonable fears” among teachers and their unions of “fewer teachers being employed – possibly even none.” He noted to Fox News Digital, however, that he doesn’t “necessarily” believe that scenario will play out, and is more focused “on the potential added value from AI tutors” than the bots replacing teachers.
“If I were the government or the school district, and there’s an opportunity to double the quality of education – getting most kids to college level by the age of 11 or 12 – with 25% more teachers, I would take this deal,” Russell told Fox News Digital. “The teachers would work as guides with small groups of kids, also helping them to learn to collaborate and so on, rather than teaching one lesson to a large class.”
“The National Education Association believes that the development and expanding use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies will continue to impact students, educators, public education, and the greater community,” the resolution states before outlining guiding principles such as AI needing to be transparent and to “not compromise the privacy of educators, students, or their families.”
Russell did note that risks associated with using the technology include possible indoctrination of students, while human involvement in education would still be necessary. Human roles in education could morph into roles such as “playground monitor” or leading classes on civics and morality or group exercises, according to the Guardian article.
His comments come on the heels of a study out of Denmark that found “charismatic” robots, those that are programmed to speak in a passionate tone, can have a positive impact on college students, boosting creativity during group projects.
“We haven’t done the experiments so we don’t know whether an AI system is going to be enough for a child. There’s motivation, there’s learning to collaborate, it’s not just ‘Can I do the sums?’” Russell said. “It will be essential to ensure that the social aspects of childhood are preserved and improved.”
ChatGPT and other chatbots have become so well-educated, Russell said at the UN summit, that they are “starting to hit a brick wall” and may soon be “running out of text in the universe” to use for training.