Cómo afrontar las evaluaciones en la era de la IA: ¿Qué se considera trampa?
PODCAST INVITADO: Ed-Technical Temporada 1 Episodio 6
Únase a dos exmaestras: Libby Hills de la Jacobs Foundation y el investigador de IA Owen Henkel – para el Serie de podcasts Ed-Technical sobre la IA en la educación.
Cada episodio, presentado por un invitado en BOLDLibby y Owen pedirán a expertos que ayuden a los educadores a discernir la información útil entre la exageración en torno a la IA. Les harán preguntas como: "¿Cómo ayuda realmente la IA a estudiantes y profesores?", "¿Qué sabemos realmente sobre esta tecnología y qué es solo especulación?" y "¿Cuando decimos 'IA', a qué nos referimos exactamente?".
In the sixth episode of this series, Libby and Owen talk to Matt Glanville, Director of Assessment at the International Baccalaureate (IB). The IB works with over 5,000 schools worldwide in 160 countries to offer a range of curriculum programmes and qualifications. Early last year they shared their progressive stance on AI – rather than banning AI tools to try to prevent cheating, they recognize that they will become part of everyday life, and therefore students need support to use them ethically, transparently, and safely.
Matt (another ex-teacher ❤) talks about IB’s position and how they deal with cheating. We discuss what’s new about cheating in a post-ChatGPT world and what isn’t (spoiler – malicious and determined cheating isn’t a new problem for schools). Matt poses some provocative questions about how we define cheating. Is it cheating to use large language models (LLMs) to give you ideas for your essay? What about having an LLM write an essay using the ideas you give it? We also touch on the implications for formal assessments. Will oral exams make a comeback?
Most importantly, we introduce Owen to Mills & Boon.
Invitados y recursos
- The International Baccalaureate’s AI resources and content
- The International Baccalaureate’s March 2023 statement about ChatGPT and AI
- Matt talking about IB’s position on AI at the ACES annual meeting
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I like oral examinations coming back and in the age of screens speaking as a form of communication feeds some support