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Originally Posted by Russic
It will be so fascinating to see where this goes for education. On one hand, graduates in 2035 will be the first ones who've had all 12 years with a robot tutor available 24/7. Will they have cheated, leaving them laughably unready for the world? Or will they have leveraged it to be far more effective?
One laughable difference between teacher's education and the real world was that in the education stage there's a ton of attention paid to catering learning to each individual's learning style.
This is all well and good until you enter an actual classroom and the realities of time get in the way. AI might actually be able to solve this problem, where concepts can be explained to each individual child slightly differently depending on their style and interests. "Explain the concept of natural selection, but pretend you're explaining it to somebody who only understands things in terms of the WWE/Pokemon/The Marvel Cinematic Universe."
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If a kid makes it all the way through school relying on AI they will have amazing skills to direct it that should be valuable afterwards. I was a master at open book tests in engineering and now am a master googler. It’s extremely useful to be able to find answers quickly.
Having said that, I can’t begin to imagine what AI will be capable of 12 years from now. Just imagine how capable you’d be if you never forgot a single thing you read or heard your entire life.