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Numerade analyzed survey data and news reports to find out how schools are regulating the use of generative AI tools such as ChatGPT.
Recent lawsuit against a school for punishing a student for using AI in a class assignment highlights the need for clear policies and trust in educators to determine when AI is appropriate.
Opinion: Brown: If AI gets kids through school, these will become just the sorts of adults who could find themselves replaced by AI.
Efforts to ban chatbots like ChatGPT in schools focus on preventing cheating, but enforcement faces challenges due to AI detection inaccuracies and widespread accessibility of chatbot technology. Banning could also hinder students' opportunities to learn effective technology usage, while straining teacher-student relationships.
The regulatory and policy landscape for AI is an emerging issue in regional and national jurisdictions globally, for example in the European Union [68] and Russia. [69] Since early 2016, many national, regional and international authorities have begun adopting strategies, actions plans and policy papers on AI.
Teens increasingly don’t trust the online content they consume, and AI is making it worse, according to a new study. A high school senior explains why that matters. Teens like me don’t trust ...
Web filtering in schools blocks students from inappropriate and distracting content across the web, while allowing sites that are selected by school administrators. [1] Rather than simply blocking off large portions of the Internet, many schools utilize customizable web filtering systems that provide them with greater control over which sites are allowed and which are blocked.
At Princeton High School, students are trying to combat the rapid decline of indigenous languages with some unlikely help: a furry, wide-eyed stuffed animal named Che’w. Many high schools are ...