I co-teach AP Computer Science A through Microsoft’s TEALS program. The classroom runs on Chromebooks, Google Classroom, and code.org (AWS). Corporate infrastructure top to bottom. This year I added an AI tutor. That’s apparently the controversial part.

The research is interesting: a Wharton study found students using standard ChatGPT performed 17% worse on exams—the “crutch” effect. But students using AI with pedagogical guardrails showed no negative effect. The problem isn’t AI in education. It’s unguided AI. So I built a tutor that asks probing questions instead of giving answers. I’m sharing the prompt I use and how to set one up yourself.

While, China made AI education mandatory for six-year-olds this year. We’re still deciding whether to block ChatGPT.

  • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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    8 hours ago

    a common complaint about AI in the classroom is there is no open source, federated, or other ‘free’ version. It sucks,

    The usable free LLMs that can be run on-prem sucks? Is that what sucks? Because there are some.

    Do the complainers know they’re complaining about a non-issue? Can you use that situation to help describe what Beggaring the Question means?