The Role of AI in Assisting Teachers and in Formative Assessments of Students
- By Kate Lucariello
- 06/01/23
How
can AI be developed to help advance teaching? For beginners, it needs
to put teachers front and center, according to a new report from the
United States Department of Education.
The
recently released report, “Artificial Intelligence and the Future
of Teaching and Learning: Insights and Recommendations,” by ED's
Office of
Educational Technology (OET), outlines the
opportunities, challenges, and risks of using AI in teaching and
assessments. It offers recommendations for how these can be
successfully fielded.
The
report notes that the use of AI in teaching should “always center
educators” (ACE) so that the answer to the question of whether AI
will replace teachers is a resounding “no.” Teachers need to be
involved with decisions about the design, selection, and evaluation
of AI-enabled technologies. They spend about 50 hours a week, less
than half that time directly involved with students, the report
notes. AI can change that, taking over some of the administrative,
clerical, planning, preparation, and evaluation tasks.
Some
of the ways AI can assist and lighten teachers’ workloads include:
-
Helping adapt the standardized curriculum to better fit specific
student or class needs;
-
Providing voice assistance to students with disabilities such as
hearing impairment to translate American Sign Language into English;
-
Noticing and communicating patterns in student performance to target
areas where they might need extra help.
But
in order for teachers to help design, select, and evaluate AI tools,
they need “time and support so they can stay abreast of both the
well-known and the newer issues that are arising” to anticipate
risks, the report warns. Questions such as when teachers should be at
the helm, how much can be delegated to an AI, and how teachers can
override the AI and regain control if needed should be addressed
early on.
Other
risks involve the danger of surveillance resulting in negative
consequences for teachers and the possible difficulty in balancing
how far to trust an AI. A chilling example is a
study in which researchers found that “people will
follow instructions from a robot during a simulated fire emergency
even when (a) they are told the robot is broken and (b) the advice is
obviously wrong.”
The
report recommends that teachers be able to understand how an AI model
works in order to make an informed decision about using, modifying,
or overriding it, especially when the AI is making recommendations
for individual student instruction.
This
speaks to formative assessments and how AI conducts them. A key
priority is to keep humans “in the loop and in control,” the
report states. Such assessments go beyond mere grading. They involve
using different question types to demonstrate student knowledge,
measuring student skills beyond subject matter, giving real-time
feedback, helping neurodiverse students demonstrate competencies,
adaptating to differing learner abilities, assessing the learning
process, and documenting ongoing progress as opposed to only achieved
milestones.
AI-enhanced
formative assessments can be done successfully using aids such as
game format or reading aloud. Instant “feedback loops” of various
kinds can be valuable, whether students are working alone, in small
groups, or in a classroom.
The
report’s recommendations for AI involvement with formative
assessments include:
-
Measuring what matters, not only academics but other skills for
success in life;
-
Supporting “help-seeking and help-giving” and detecting when
those are needed;
-
Having teachers and students participate in assessment design and
efficacy;
-
Monitoring for “algorithmic discrimination” in instructional
interventions and support.
A
webinar going into more depth on this report will be held Tuesday,
June 13, 2023, at 2:30 p.m. ET. Signup is available by QR code at
this link.
Visit
this page for a summary handout of the report’s main
points.
The
full report can be downloaded
from this page.
About the Author
Kate Lucariello is a former newspaper editor, EAST Lab high school teacher and college English teacher.