Queensland state school students are banned from using ChatGPT, but public and private teachers have been given the “green light” to use chatbots to draft homework and emails.
Amid the rise of AI, Queensland Teachers’ Union and Independent Education Union – Queensland and Northern Territory Branch co-published a resource for teachers, with a traffic light framework considering legal, industrial, professional and educational issues.
Examples included using AI to generate emails to staff, write articles for newsletters, draft homework questions and text for students to critique, and draft lesson plans. “Red” – such as chatbots for entirely self-directed student learning or relying on AI to deal with a teacher shortage – were problematic and not supported by the unions.Advertisement“Technology and AI are a tool that can enhance teaching and learning. They do not replace the teacher.”“ChatGPT remains blocked for all students on the department’s network while the department reviews the technology and develops guidelines for use,” he said.
On July 6, education ministers agreed the National Artificial Intelligence Taskforce would consult on a draft Australian AI framework for schools, to be finalised in 2023.Education Minister Grace Grace said it was important to improve engagement with technology like ChatGPT and maximise benefits, but also be mindful of challenges to academic integrity and learning.
Philippines Latest News, Philippines Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
‘Shocked to the core’: Queensland ex-residential youth care worker says she received very little training‘They put me in a house with two 16-year-old and 17-year-old guys, who were renowned for sexually assaulting women’, woman says
Read more »
Queensland police declined father’s requests for help before son was shot dead, inquest toldRaghe Mohamed Abdi was killed by officers while moving towards them with a knife on Logan Motorway south of Brisbane
Read more »