OpenAI launches free AI training for teachers, but there is an uncertain response
Kyiv • UNN
OpenAI and Common Sense Media have launched a Free Online Course for K12 teachers on using ChatGPT in education. The course has already been implemented in dozens of schools in the United States, but some teachers have expressed concern.
OpenAI has officially launched a free online course designed to help K-12 teachers learn how to implement ChatGPT. It is reported about the introduction of the course in "dozens" schools.
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OpenAI and its nonprofit partner Common Sense Media have launched a free teacher training course aimed at demystifying artificial intelligence and rapid design, the organizations announced on Wednesday.
OpenAI says it has already implemented the course in "dozens" of schools, including in Arizona, California, as well as in the Challenger schools charter school system.
Schools across the country are grappling with new opportunities and challenges as artificial intelligence changes education. With this course, we take a proactive approach to support and educate front-line teachers and prepare them for this transformation
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The training course, aimed at K-12 teachers (K-12 teachers in the United States are defined as educational engineers), demonstrates how to use the ChatGPT chatbot for various educational purposes, such as creating content for lessons or optimizing meetings in departments.
The honorable one on the Common Sense Media website, whose course is a pershoy proposition within the framework of the OpenAI partnership with Common Sense Media.
OpenAI, which is supported by Microsoft MSFT.O and other investors, valued at 1 157 billion in the latest round of funding, have formed a dedicated team to support the exchange rate.
Teachers remind us that AI can be used as a fraud tool.
Les Warwick, a sports lecturer at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, is concerned that resources like OpenAI are normalizing the use of AI among teachers. Reasons to worry – not everyone knows the ethical implications of this still-new technology.
In the hint examples [provided by OpenAI], one tells you to include grades and feedback from past assignments, while the other tells you to create a hint for an exercise to teach another subject, such as the history of the Mexican Revolution. The next security module explains how to never enter student data, and then explains the bias inherent in generative AI and accuracy issues. I'm not sure if all of this is compatible with use cases