Sunday, December 29, 2024
ICYMI: Hatches Battening Edition (12/29)
Saturday, December 28, 2024
Federal Voucher Bill Offers Big Returns For Wealthy
Thursday, December 26, 2024
Bad AI Writing Advice
Today, I teach my students a set of in-class AI prompts, based on a standard model of supporting writing, on how to brainstorm, focus, and develop their ideas. “I didn’t really know where to start,” wrote one student at the end of last semester, “and ChatGPT helped me think about questions, and I was able to start planning what I wanted to do based on the different options.” Another student wrote, “I started off with pretty much no idea and was able to use ChatGPT to find a topic that I’m interested in and I’m working with it to narrow it down.” When I now meet with students, our conversations are so much more productive, as we now have a focus.
Which doesn't sound so much like brainstorming as just generating a list of ideas from which the student can choose. I have had my share of those 15-20 minute sessions with students, and I am having a hard time imagine how one does that in a way that puts the work on the student, that helps them probe their own interests and half-formed ideas aided by what you know of the student and what you can see in their face and voice as they discuss--how do you do all that if you are a computer that has zero perception of the student themself?
But Sarofian-Butin sees even more involved roles for the AI. Some of his topics are complex. So many variables, so much ambiguity, so many ways to define the issue. They're, you know, hard.
I therefore teach my students another set of AI prompts to help them see what good thinking about such issues looks like. This is formally known as a cognitive apprenticeship: “one needs to deliberately bring the thinking to the surface, to make it visible, whether it’s in reading, writing, problem solving.” AI is so good at doing this by walking students step-by-step through its output.
And now alarm bells are ringing, because AI is NOT so good at walking students through its output because it does not "think about" ideas in any human sense of the word. It cannot "bring the thinking to the surface" because it is literally not thinking at all. And some of the other tasks that Sarofian-Butin assigns to his composer's apprentice--
Seeing AI offer suggestions for a thesis statement or a paper outline in real-time, with explanations, is incredibly helpful. “The outlines,” one student commented, “helped me from getting too stuck on small details and reminded me to think about the big picture.”
He also suggests that AI might help students can find answers to "am I making the right argument" and again, an AI does not know anything about how good your argument is or is not.
He reports that a student said that they know that ChatGPT is there to use as an assistant rather than a replacement.
Bad AI writing instruction advice all suffers from the same problem-- it presumes that the only purpose of the writing is to create the final product, an artifact to be handed in. As long as you have a final artifact to deliver to your professor, then the process is of secondary importance.
No. We can say that we want every player on the football team to log an hour in the weight room three days a week. But that's hard, and the players are reluctant, and they're not sure they can manage it, so they go to the weight room and someone else puts the weights on, and someone else lifts the weights, and another person lowers the weights back down, and then the player fills out his log, and that final product, that log-shaped artifact is perfect and exactly what the coach asked for--except that it's not.
Writing is about making thinking manifest. Many of the problems Sarofian-Bution is address with AI are thinking problems, not writing problems. So what happens when we outsource the thinking parts of writing?
I'm trying to figure out what a Sarifian-Butin student has actually done. The student selected a topic from an AI-generated list, picked out an AI thesis "example," followed the AI generated outline, made AI-suggested improvements, all while reading AI-generated "explanations" of the AI "process " (that are not actually a real explanation of how a real human might have done it).
What has the student gotten from this process? What mental muscles did they develop? What critical parts of the writing process did they complete beyond filling in the blanks laid out by someone else? How can one know if they have used the AI as a crutch or had it carry them entirely? How is this superior to, say, watching someone else write an essay while explaining what they are doing? What problem is this solving (beyond a time-sucking parade of wobbly students asking for 15-20 minutes of advice, which is not a student problem)?
How is any of this better than leaving them to struggle on their own?
Yes, I know-- left to their own devices, they will produce some really terrible essays. Believe me-- I may not match Sarofian-Butin's credentials in any other way, but after 39 years in a high school English classroom, I will bet I've read far more terrible writing than he has. And not once did I think, what this student needs is something that can do all the hard part for him. Did I think some could, would, and did benefit from human-to-human tutoring? Absolutely--but that involves a human being who can read them, hear them, respond to them, draw them out and sense when to back off.
The thing about those terrible essays is that you don't get students to do better by doing the hard parts for them. They have to struggle and work and you have to coach and cajole and hold hands and kick butts and let them find their own voice and their own way.
This is at the heart of most student endeavors. I was a yearbook advisor for ages, and there is no question that they best way to get a good yearbook is to shove the kids out of the way and do it yourself. What do they get from that? Not a damned thing, but the book would look good. You could have a much more beautiful prom if you let adults do the decorating.
And you would get much better student writing if you didn't leave it to students.
But the product is not the point. The struggle, the growth, the learning, the human interaction, the heavy lifting is the point. Trying to reduce student involvement in the process gets a better product, but that can't be the whole point. Everything in education would run so much more smoothly if not for all the children.
Tuesday, December 24, 2024
Some Christmas Tunery
Here at the Institute (where the Board of Directors still firmly believe in Santa Claus), we like our seasonal music, both as consumers and as producers, so as is tradition here, I'll share with you a couple of sources of music for the next twenty-four hours or so.
I have long maintained a Christmas play list of Youtube, and every year I rotate some things out and add some new things in. I tend toward videos that aren't already played a zillion times, so we're mostly guaranteed that we won't be hearing the things we have already gotten tired of. So here's this year's edition:
Monday, December 23, 2024
It's Here. Replacing Teachers With AI
“Very early on, I started noticing frustration around the lack of ability for the traditional model to be able to personalize anything,” she recalls. “About halfway through my daughter’s second grade year, she came home and said, ‘I don’t want to go to school tomorrow.’ She looked at me and she said, ‘School is so boring,’ and I just had this lightbulb moment. They’ve taken this kid who’s tailor-made to wanna be a good student, and they’ve wiped away that passion.”
She launched Alpha, according to her LinkedIn profile, in 2016, and there started creating the model that would later be spun off into its own company, 2 Hour Learning. And that's the model that she now wants to move to other states.
It sure sounds like snake oil. The headline pitch on the website is this--
School is broken, and we're here to fix it. 2 Hour Learning gives students an AI tutor that allows them to: Learn 2X in 2 Hours
As at least one profile notes off-handedly, we're not talking about LLM ChatGPT AI. No, Price is still peddling one of the older models of computer-aided education.
Price has found a way to use technology as a tool that helps create a personalized learning experience for each student. “The thing that’s really interesting about what technology has enabled is that it does a good job of giving every student the exact level of information they need at exactly the pace they need. We’ve [created]an AI tutor who is basically able to put guide rails along these kids’ educational experience in order to make sure they’re learning efficiently, they’re learning to mastery and they’re not getting frustrated. If they’re frustrated, learning turns off.”
Price is relentlessly media-ready. She has a Youtube channel, a podcast, and appears for interviews and in advertorials-- marketing masquerading as news copy. She touches all the usual talking points--the school model is 100 years old, NAEP scores show dreadful learning loss. She's careful to express admiration for the fabulous job teachers do in an impossible task!
Salon posted a Price piece that claimed that back when Jimmy Carter created the Department of Education, the US was "ranked first in the world for academic proficiency," which is absolutely untrue. The ostensible point of the piece is to argue in favor of not ending the department of education, but mostly to argue more money should be going to AI tutoring (Salon identifies her as a podcast host, not the owner of an AI tutoring business). She also says that "attracting and retaining top teachers is the first step to any successful education reform."
Well, not at her company.
The model is simple. Students sit on the computer with their AI tutor for two hours of core subjects in the morning. After that, they move into what seems like the old open school model--they pursue their interests and passions. As Price tells an "interviewer" in one paid advertorial:
Yes, it’s absolutely possible! Not only can they learn in two hours what they would learn all day in a traditional classroom, the payoffs are unbelievable! My students master their core curriculum through personalized learning in two hours. That opens up the rest of their day to focus on life skills and finding where their passions meet purpose. Students love it because it takes them away from the all-day lecture-based classroom model. Instead, my students are following their passions.
Price believes that one secret of success is motivated students, and she further believes that it's very motivational to tell a student "Just put in two hours on the computer and you can have the rst of the day to follow your muse."
Shiny! |
There are some points that don't come up in the marketing.
One is that the Alpha Schools don't appear to be accredited, a point that comes up in some complaints about the school.
Most jobs are poorly thought out and poorly designed—a mishmash of skills and activities . . . poor job designs are also quickly exposed with a move to remote work
Huh.
Andrew Price has maintained a low public profile with Alpha Schools. Maybe he's just letting his wife have her own fun hobby business, or maybe the couple has determined that the whole Mom saving schools for her kids origin story plays better than private equity guy decides to try making a buck in the education biz.
It's also unclear why they've changed the brand name to Unbounded in Georgia. Alpha Schools, powered by 2 Hour Learning, have branched out to states outside Texas and is trying to break into others as well. It's quite possible that they have to build different sorts of shells around the core business to avoid rules about operating for profit schools.
These are folks who have combined one old failed education model (algorithm directed worksheet generation as tutoring) with another (open free classroom) with somewhat more successful old business models (deprofessionalize your staff to reduce costs, charge out the wazoo) with education snake oil shtick (schools are failing, but because I love my child, I know how to revolutionize education) with a proven method of cooking the books (enroll wealthy, well-supported kids and you too can gave miraculous results). Here's hoping that Georgia and other states are smart enough not to fall for this.
Sunday, December 22, 2024
ICYMI: Three More Sleeps Edition (12/22)
If your household calendar is tied to the school calendar, your holiday is likely under way. If your calendar is like ours, you are running a tad behind on the various holiday stuff. Every year I think my old geology professor, who was also the cornet player in our college trad jazz band, had the right idea--he and his wife sent out cards every year to celebrate Ground Hog Day.
At any rate, here is your reading list for the week.
Trump’s School Improvement Plan: Deport American StudentsBillionaires’ Love Affair with School Reform with No Accountability (Part 1)
Saturday, December 21, 2024
Federal Anti-Commie Education Bill
Yep, someone has proposed (and 33 shining lights co-sponsored) a bill to root out that damned commie education from our classrooms.
HR 5349 was proposed by Rep Maria Elvira Salazar, a Florida Republican. Salazar was the daughter of two Cuban exiles who rose to prominence as a reporter for Univision and Telemundo. In 2018 she was beaten by former Clinton cabinet member Donna Shalala. In the 2020 rematch, endorsed by Trump, Salazar won. But she went on to be one of the few GOP reps who voted to create the January 6 commission. She has been fairly moderate, as GOP reps go.
But this bill-- the "Crucial Communism Teaching Act."
It's short and sweet. Its purpose? To help prepare school students to be "civically responsible and knowledgeable adults." And to ensure that high school students know that "communism has led to the deaths of over 100,000,000 victims worldwide, to ensure that they understand the "dangers of communism and similar political ideologies," and to ensure that they "understand that 1,500,000,000 people still suffer under communism."
To do that, the bill says that the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation (yes, that's a thing-- an educational, research and human rights nonprofit organization" authorized by a unanimous act of Congress under Clinton in 1993)-- the VCMF is to develop a civic curriculum that should discuss communism and totalitarianism and explain that these "conflict with the principles of freedom and democracy that are essential to the founding of the United States."
That curriculum should be updated to keep abreast of changing communist and totalitarian regimes. Particularly China.
Also, the VCMF should develop some oral history resources gathering "Portraits in Patriotism" from "diverse individuals" (that may kill the bill right there) who "demonstrate civic-minded qualities, are victims of above mentioned political ideologies, and can point out how these contrast with the USA.
I suppose the good news here is that there's no mandate to actually use these materials, just a directive for VCMF to "engage" with state and local education folks to "assist" with high schools using the stuff. VCMF actually already has a whole bunch of Communism Is Bad education materials.
It could be worse. It's not a mandate to use Prager U materials, after all. And to be clear, I'm not personally a big fan of communism, though in my reading of history, nations that "turn communist" usually keep being awful in ways that they were awful before anyone pretended to be a communist.
In fact, now that I think of it, some study of what creeping totalitarianism wouldn't hurt Americans (in or out of high school) right about now.
But teachers recognize this same old dodge. "We want students to know and agree with This Particular Thing," say some bunch of leaders somewhere. "How can we do that? I know! We'll get teachers to teach it to them. Because there's lots of room in the day to slip in one more slab of curricular materials. Also, students always believe what teachers say. Also, legislating curriculum always works out well."
Congress may very well pass this. Teachers will either ignore it or not as they are so inclined, and politicians will be proud of themselves for battling the scourge of communism and for once against standing up for only the correct sort of indoctrination in our schools.