Reflection #10

What strategies can we employ as educators to teach the ethical and productive use of AI?

I think a good strategy is to do what has been done in this class and by that I mean explaining how AI works, how it can be unreliable, and the politics or lack there of surrounding it. Ethic and Productivity can be combined as it gives the student the ability to decide for themselves if what is being generated is ethical and how to critically think about that. It’s interesting to think of AI as a means to develop critical thinking because it seems a theme in criticism amognst many is that reliance on AI will prevent us from thinking for ourselves. I disagree.

here is what Chat.openAI had to say:

  1. Integrated Curriculum:
    • Develop or incorporate modules that explicitly address the ethical considerations of AI within the curriculum. Cover topics such as bias, transparency, accountability, and societal impact. Integrate case studies and real-world examples to illustrate both positive and negative aspects.

  1. Hands-On Projects with Ethical Considerations:
    • Assign practical projects that involve designing, developing, or evaluating AI systems. This hands-on experience not only deepens technical understanding but also allows students to grapple with the ethical implications of their work.

  1. Promote Critical Thinking and Collaboration:
    • Foster a culture of critical thinking by encouraging students to question and discuss the ethical implications of AI. Emphasize collaborative projects, where students work together to consider ethical considerations, promoting a holistic understanding of AI’s impact on society.

Reflection #9

I asked ChatGPT how it thinks AI benefits Education this is the top 5 things it came up with:

Artificial Intelligence (AI) offers several benefits for education, making it a valuable tool in enhancing the learning process. Here are some reasons why AI is good for education:

  1. Personalized learning: AI can adapt to the individual needs of students. It can analyze a student’s learning style, strengths, and weaknesses and provide customized learning materials and feedback. This helps students progress at their own pace, increasing engagement and understanding.
  2. Immediate feedback: AI-powered educational tools can provide instant feedback on assignments and assessments. This quick feedback helps students identify and correct their mistakes, leading to more effective learning.
  3. Accessibility and inclusivity: AI can make education more accessible to a wider range of learners, including those with disabilities. It can provide speech-to-text and text-to-speech capabilities, translation services, and other tools that accommodate diverse needs.
  4. Automating administrative tasks: AI can automate administrative tasks, allowing educators to focus on teaching rather than paperwork. This can improve efficiency in educational institutions and reduce the administrative burden on teachers.
  5. Advanced analytics: AI can analyze vast amounts of educational data to identify patterns and trends, helping educators make informed decisions. It can be used for predicting student outcomes, improving curriculum design, and identifying at-risk students who may need extra support.

The list had up to 12 points but i thought that was excessive. unsurprisingly it had a lot to say on the topic.

I agree with point one on personalized learning I think we will see this widely implemented in the future.

For point two I am hesistant because we do not and should not trust this “instant feedback” wholely as AIs might not provide accurate and/or appropriate feedback. I do not think this leads to more effective learning. Perhaps more efficient but not more effective.

I think AI is great for Accessibility and inclusion. With the Caveat that access to the technology itself might not be inclusive.

I think Automating administrative tasks for teachers is a great benefit however we must be cogniscient of our responsibilities to ensure these tasks are still done right.

Advanced analytics sounds great in theory but I could see logistical flaws and inequalities and worry of Artificial Halucinations in this context.

Reflection # 8 Gamification

One method I thought of to incorporate Gamification into Social Studies Classrooms is through history simulation games.

During my undergraduate education, I was involved with facilitating a number of Crisis Simulations at high school level Model United Nations Conferences. I have never seen students so passionate and engaged about history content. Yes, they were there voluntarily with their friends, but the fact that they chose history crisis simulations as an extracurricular says a lot. Students often expressed they wished they knew about crisis simulations at the beginning of their high school education.

I would love to incorporate History Sims into my classroom and as an extracurricular at any school I end up at. Of course, at Conference there is a competitive aspect of awards being handed out at the end but I believe teachers can creatively replicate this somehow. And honestly, I’ve observed throughout the course of the conference that the awards are a small thing, and students know they are unlikely to get one as there are three for groups of usually 30 students. They actively engage and participate out of fun. And the camaraderie and group dynamics are amazing to watch.

Here are some links to a website on history simulations for more information:

https://historysimulation.com/gamification/

https://historysimulation.com/world-war-1-map-activity

And here are some links to highchool level Model UN conferences with Crisis Committees:

https://cahsmun.org/about

https://www.ssicsim.ca/

https://caimun.ca/about-caimun

https://vmun.com/about/

https://bcmun.org/about

Reflection #7 Accessibility

Reflect on what we discussed in this weeks zoom class, including issues in the visibility of certain disabilities, accessibility-minded frameworks (UDL, for example), using web accessibility tools, and other methods for supporting inclusivity. Try using speech-to-text in your post creation. 

I used a program called Otter.AI to do speech-to-text. I was having trouble finding a software/website to do the speech-to-text. Otter.AI is meant to record meetings/conversations for professional use. It’s very user friendly and a aesthetic professional platform.

This is what it came up with:

Okay, so this is me using speech to text. I’m using a program called otter.ai.
That’s, I think meant a function to like record meetings like for professionals, but it’s just the easiest one I found the platform which actually looks great. I think this would be perfect if you’re interviewing someone, or even maybe to just like us, when students are doing like an oral presentation or something.
Yeah, as for that week, that lecture, I thought it was really interesting when we looked at, like accessibility of websites and like contrast colors, and then also UDL since then I’ve like done more assignments, obviously. And I found that it’s once you put your mind to it is really easy to implement UDL because you do a lot of it without realizing it. Like one assignment I was like, Okay, for the write up. I’m just going to connect it to UDL as much as I as much as I could and I connected literally everything to UDL, and all of the like, boxes were ticked and it was like perfect. So, yeah, that’s my thoughts on accessibility. Okay, bye

I thought it fascinating that it creating a summary of the “meeting” using buzzwords

Online learning reflection

  • As discussed in class, the majority of share the experience of transitioning to online teaching modalities during the recent Covid-19 pandemic. Reflect on your experiences as a student studying in this new format. What aspects of online learning did you like? What issues did you encounter? If given the option to pursue a programme offered either in a F2F (Face to Face), online, or hybrid format; which would you pick and why?

I dislike learning in online formats. Personally I find screens distracting and have trouble connecting with peers and an instructor over video, synchronous, or asynchronous communication methods. I found that if I fell behind it was much harder to catch up in an online learning setting when there were deliverables more often and consistently. I had to drop a lot of my online classes. This sounds sad but the only part I liked was having an excuse to not pay attention to the classes I didn’t like. I don’t know why but my biggest issue was that I would literally just fall asleep all the time during online classes or asynchronous classes too. I would always pick Face to Face because I just can’t pay attention to a screen.

  • As we saw with Covid-19, transitions to new modalities are not always expected nor thoroughly prepared for in advance. As a new educator in the secondary system, what advice do you have to yourself and other new educators in how they can best prepare themselves for such a transition if it were to happen in the future? Share two learning activities you plan to have “in your back pocket” that would be useful for leading a course in your specific teachable area during such an emergency transition.

I think having emergency screencastify lessons is useful for an emergency transition or even for when we get sick for a TOC to play. I know something said we shouldnt have our face on the screen because its distracting but I think it is invaluable for students to see a familiar face in those circumstances. I personally cannot focus without the face.

For humanities, having students work in google docs together is an amazing resource and seriously undervalued. It works for both sychronous and asychronous group work. During Covid me and my friends would run entire model UN conferences for hundreds of teens solely off zoom and group google docs.

Week 5 Reflection: AI-generated Designs

This week, I created an AI-generated design (Below) for the first time using Microsoft Designer.

The process was frustrating and concerning. For example, the auto-generated prompts were themselves against their guidelines, and thus, an error message was delivered. Furthermore, prompts that I thought were harmless generated content that I did not intend and would consider harmful. I tried to avoid this by telling the AI not to include certain words and images, such as “no Guilt,” but I learned it steadfastly sticks to its language, switching to “guilt-free.” I played this game for a while until I had explicitly prohibited five words. It ended up being beautiful and low effort once I was finally happy with the generation. I would try it again but would be hesitant to have students use it, especially in an independent, self-directed context.

Weekly Reflection #3 Liberating Structures

I decided to look deeper into the liberating structures resource website this week as I have been combating an apathy and often resentment for technology in classrooms. I see (and hear directly from students) that in classrooms that rely heavily on technology there is a great sense of disengagement. Quite litterally the scilence speaks volumes. I sadly always expect some students to be disengaged but was really not prepared to see huge portions of classes either distracted or completely zoned out when a screen is in front of them. Surprising but understandable, when its time for students to talk about the digital material, I’ve observed to discussions to be strained or non-existent.

I think, practicing oral discussion skills in relation to technology and structuring these discussions using liberating structures strategies is a way to promote flexible, creative and critical thinking while maintaining guidelines that foster a healthy incorporation of technology in secondary classrooms.

The Min Spec structure in particular sparked my interest as it aligned with critiques I have heard from students about there being an imbalance between rules and freedom in their assignments. They have voiced that they feel a lack of guidelines actually hinders their creativity. The idea behind Min Spec is to reduce rules/specifications until it reaches a point where it would hinder a students ability to participate. The website suggests at least two to five Min Specs (must-dos) to boost productivity, progress, and freedom. I think the process of deciding between Max Specs (maximum specification) and Min Specs as a group would invest the students in the activity and teach them valuable life skills in regards to prioritization and collaboration.

All in all, I plan to look further into liberating structures and incorporate them in my classes to combat my hesitations about integrating technology in classrooms. So that classes can go from looking like

this:

Photo by RDNE Stock project from Pexels: https://www.pexels.com/photo/students-sitting-inside-the-classroom-while-using-their-smartphone-6936147/

to this:

Photo by Zainul Yasni on Unsplash

Weekly Reflection #2: Protecting, Creating, and Recreating Information

This week has given me new knowledge on protecting my students’ information and privacy. Specifically, it has made me question ways to use social and alternative media ethically and safely in my classes. Social media and novel presentation methods are very useful in teaching and learning public history.

It reminded me of a project I did in university to present Vietnamese history to the public in a fun and accessible way. I wanted to utilize social media in my presentation, specifically twitter, but I do not use twitter, did not want to provide my personal information, and did not want to go to the pain of making fake accounts. Ultimately, I found a website called TweetGen which allows you to create fake tweet reply threads. The website does not require the user to make an account and has a clear privacy policy and terms of service accessible from the homepage.

Here is a section I did for my project:

This project could be further improved by added profile pictures for the fake twitter accounts using open source images.

I’m happy to have come to find this privacy safe digital history lesson and look forward to discovering more!

Here are the references I used to create that tweet thread:

Therese Guyot-Becker, “An Introduction to Cham Law based on 18th Century Legal Documents,”
in Griffth & Hardy.
Lam Thi My Dung, “Champa Settlements in the first Millennium,” in Griffiths & Hardy.
Nicolas Weber, “Securing and Developing the Southwestern Region: The Role of the Cham and
Malay Colonies in Vietnam (18th-19th centuries),” Journal of the Economic and Social History
of the Orient (2011) 739-772.

Weekly Reflection #1: Patience, Patience, Patience….

In setting up this blog I learned patience, perseverance, and how to navigate technical difficulties (I hate MFA, specifically you duo mobile). A positive was the satisfaction I felt in getting it done and learning the process. In general a negative could be that the confusion and patience required may be frustrating and discouraging for students or teachers new to this medium.

Photo by Andrea Piacquadio: https://www.pexels.com/photo/melancholic-woman-watching-video-on-laptop-at-home-3808012/

Overall, I think I will use blogs as a teacher. I foresee that this blog and any future blogs I make will benefit me as a teacher by sharing my learning and facilitating communication and content with teachers, peers, and students 🙂