I teach 16-18 in the UK. AI has become an absolute cancer in the last year: one student last summer, told to go and write something himself, gave away that he literally hadn't even read the coursework he'd tried to submit.
As someone who has been to high school and college, I highly doubt that AI is going to replace teachers. AI doesn't have personality and therefore can't make education interesting or teach with passion like human teachers. It might enhance what teachers can do, and help them breeze past tedium, but that's the point of tools such as these, to replace tedious tasks so that humans can get more leverage out of their time.
I teach 16-18 in the UK. AI has become an absolute cancer in the last year: one student last summer, told to go and write something himself, gave away that he literally hadn't even read the coursework he'd tried to submit.
As someone who has been to high school and college, I highly doubt that AI is going to replace teachers. AI doesn't have personality and therefore can't make education interesting or teach with passion like human teachers.
It might enhance what teachers can do, and help them breeze past tedium, but that's the point of tools such as these, to replace tedious tasks so that humans can get more leverage out of their time.
The AI-associated adverbs and adjectives all look like they come from marketing copy and not from a scientific paper. very bizarre
Gpt4 was trained in Nigeria, where those words are more common.