Americans’ confidence in public schools is
plummeted to an all-time low. In recent years, teacher unions and school districts have diligently imposed mask mandates, lockdowns, and extreme propaganda on children, likely to no avail.
It also doesn’t help that teachers are doing an overall worse job of teaching reading and math than they used to.
according to In National Assessment of Educational Progress.
Naturally, homeschooling
Become fastest growing form of education almost 4 million We home educate K-12 students across the country.
Rather than prove their worth in the face of record low social trust, low evaluations and increased competition, teachers appear to be leaving more duties to potential successors.
according to In addition to Axios, teachers are increasingly adopting ChatGPT and other AI-powered tools to do their jobs. Writeable is one such tool.
Writable, which was acquired by education company Houghton Mifflin Harcourt last year.
probably “It scaffolds student learning and builds lifelong writing and reading skills from third to 12th grade, while saving teachers time on daily instruction and feedback.”
It works like this: Students submit writing assignments electronically to their teachers, who then submit them to Writable. Writable runs essays through ChatGPT. ChatGPT then performs the tasks habitually done by passionate teachers and provides comments and feedback. Teachers are given the opportunity to review or adjust the chatbot’s work and send it back to students.
According to Writable’s website, the RevisionAid feature provides feedback and constructive criticism to students to help them improve their writing. GrammarAid features help students learn grammar, mechanics, and style.
When it comes to fleshing out the curriculum, teachers can simply choose one of thousands of ready-made plans and customize it to suit their challenges.
“We have a lot of teachers who are taking advantage of this program and we’re very excited about it,” Jack Lynch, CEO of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, told Axios.
In addition to Writable, there are a variety of other AI tools that free teachers from the tedious task of grading tests and papers.These include:
grade scope, easy graderand canvas.
Last March, Blaze News reported that a poll commissioned by the Walton Family Foundation and conducted by Impact Research found that 51% of 1,002 K-12 teachers surveyed use ChatGPT to perform their duties. It was reported that it was found that
“Three in 10 teachers use this tool to plan lessons (30%), come up with creative ideas for lessons (30%), and build background knowledge for lessons and classes (27%). ” says Impact Research.
education week
report Last month, 73% of educators surveyed by the EdWeek Research Center said their school district does not currently prohibit the use of ChatGPT or other large-scale AI-powered language models. A further 20% said such use is prohibited, but that the ban only applies to students. Only 7% of respondents said teachers are prohibited from offloading their work to their AI tools.
According to the same survey, 56% of respondents said they expected the use of AI in schools to increase.
1 unidentified Texas teacher
Said Education Week, “I use ChatGPT a lot to create lesson plans, syllabuses, and letters to parents. It’s a very effective tool, but I still have problems with everything. I am reviewing and editing.”
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