Say hello to your new tutor: It’s ChatGPT
Say hello to your new tutor: It’s ChatGPT
As schools across the country ban AI tools, this Silicon Valley school is encouraging students to use one
Doscher expected more “silly” questions during Khanmigo’s debut, but said she was impressed to see that most of the questions entered into the chatbot were math-focused. She noticed students posing more questions to Khanmigo than they might typically ask out loud.
As the class continues to use the tool, Doscher says she plans to explain it’s for helping — not for every question. If students were to use it too often, “I could see that really slowing down their pace.”
Neil Siginatchu, an 8-year-old boy in her class who’s doing sixth-grade math, had mixed reactions to Khanmigo. “It gives more detailed description than I would have run through in my head or write on paper, which can be helpful, or it can be annoying,” Neil said. “Because if it’s too detailed it’s a lot to read and if I don’t need it, it’s just excessive.”
After Alisha and her classmates experiment more with Khanmigo and send those thumbs-ups and thumbs-down reactions on the chatbot’s responses, a team of humans plans to refine how the tutor interacts with students, Khan says.
After that, he plans to roll out its free Khanmigo tool to select schools around the country later this month. But both the area’s tech fluency and the privileged makeup of the lab school — where the student-teacher ratio is 10 to one — could affect its usefulness elsewhere, experts say.
Stephen Aguilar, an assistant professor of education at the University of Southern California, says he’s curious about how Khanmigo might function in different contexts.
“Is there broadband that never goes down?,” Aguilar wonders. “What sort of computers do these students have access to? Do they have their own or do they have to share? Do they have tech support? Is there a person on the ground, or do I need to call a number?”
Khan notes that the other schools that will be getting access to Khanmigo will have support from Khan Academy in that rollout, with a lot of hand-holding along the way. Khan Academy already provides its educational resources to more than 500 school districts and schools in the United States, with a focus on districts serving students from low-income communities and students of color.
Chatbots have been criticized for going off the rails in conversations with reporters, saying they can think or feel things. The people and data that train they are inherently biased, prompting concerns about the widespread use of the technology which can espouse racist and sexist ideals. And the chatbots — while sometimes convincing — also can give wrong answers.
But in one day of testing at the Khan Lab School last week, Khanmigo appeared to stay in line. In the Khan Lab high school in Mountain View, ninth-grade history teacher Derek Vanderpool notes these concerns to his students, reminding them that they should always double-check any information they get from Khanmigo.
Vanderpool directs his students to use Khanmigo to help them design questions for an upcoming Socratic seminar where they’ll debate whether the Mongolian empire was barbaric. The main lesson he’s driving home the entire hour is similar to Doscher’s caveat at the beginning of math class: Khanmigo isn’t magic, it’s just a source, Vanderpool cautions — one that should always be cited and double-checked.
If his students are using Khanmigo for their schoolwork, “tell me you’re using it,” Vanderpool says.
Toward the end of class, Vanderpool asks Khanmigo to simulate a conversation with Genghis Khan about the Mongols’ military tactics. The AI needs to be prodded before it will cite any evidence to back up its claims. Once it does cite a history book, the students have more research to do, Vanderpool says.
“Well, now the question is: Is it a real source? So you would want to do independent research to see: Okay, can I confirm that this source actually exists?”
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