Leon Furze shares about myths and metaphors in the age of generative AI on episode 572 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
In higher education there is a need to temper the resistance and refusal of the technology with the understanding that students are using it anyway.
We can take a a personal moral stance, but if we have a responsibility to teach students, then we have a responsibility to engage with the technology on some level. In order to do that, we need to be using it and and experimenting with it because otherwise, we’re relying on third party information, conjecture, and opinions rather than direct experience.
My use of the technology has really shifted over the last few years the more I think about it as a technology and not as a vehicle for language.
Let the English teachers who love English, teach English. Let the mathematics teachers who love math, teach math. Let the science teachers teach science. And where appropriate, bring these technologies in.
Resources
- Myths, Magic, and Metaphors: The Language of Generative AI (Leon Furze)
- Arthur C. Clarke’s Third Law (Wikipedia)
- Vincent Mosco – The Digital Sublime
- MagicSchool AI
- OECD’s Definition of AI Literacy
- PISA (Programme for International Student Assessment)
- NAPLAN (Australia’s National Assessment Program – Literacy and Numeracy)
- Against AI literacy: have we actually found a way to reverse learning? by Miriam Reynoldson
- ChatGPT (OpenAI)
- CoPilot (Microsoft)
- Who Cares to Chat, by Audrey Watters (About Clippy)
- Clippy (Microsoft Office Assistant – Wikipedia)
- Gemini (Google AI)
- Be My Eyes Accessibility with GPT-4o
- Be My Eyes (Assistive Technology)
- Teaching AI Ethics – Leon Furze
- Black Box (Artificial Intelligence – Wikipedia)
- Snagit (TechSmith)
- Meta Ray-Ban Smart Glasses