AI is rapidly becoming a common feature in school classrooms and workshops worldwide, with many educators and instructors exploring the potential of this technology to improve teaching and learning outcomes.
One of the key features of conversational AI that sets it apart from other technologies is its ability to generate human-like text and perform a wide range of language-related tasks. If you have used tools like ChatGPT or Noodle Factory’s “Walter” platform that leverages the GPT-3 large language model for some services, you have experienced human-like capabilities from a machine learning algorithm. This makes conversational AI particularly useful for generating personalised lesson plans, providing real-time feedback to students, and generating explanations or summaries of complex concepts.
Teaching is not just about content; it is about connection. Our first challenge is to connect and communicate with students in innovative ways. As educators, we need to feel comfortable curating our curricula via new tools and platforms to meet our students where they are. We also need to leverage digital capabilities in service of emerging digital pedagogies in ways that foster collaboration and creativity. To paraphrase the way Nerantzi and Beckingham have characterised the ongoing evolution of digital pedagogy, novel approaches are absolutely essential for successful teaching and learning in the digital age.
Chat-based learning is traditionally defined as online teaching and learning engagement that takes place through chat or messaging platforms. In chat-based learning, students and instructors have customarily interacted with each other through written messages rather than in person or through video conferencing. Now this communication can be mediated through a conversational AI algorithm. Chat-based learning can be self-paced, with students working through materials at their own speed or structured with set schedules for discussions and assignments. Chat-based learning can be an effective way for students to learn new material and interact with their instructors and peers. It can be particularly useful for those who prefer to learn independently or who are unable to attend in-person classes.
Conversational AI has become the more common and more valuable tool for deploying chat-based learning since it allows for real-time interaction that is mediated by artificial intelligence (i.e. algorithm(s)) and can be personalised to meet the needs of individual students.
Overall, chat-based learning can be a useful complement to other modes of learning, as it offers flexibility, convenience, and the opportunity for collaboration and asynchronous communication:
To allow for greater scalability, conversational AI is artificial intelligence that can carry out a conversation with humans in a way that is similar to that of a teacher or tutor and can be used to power chat-based learning in several ways:
Benjamin Bloom outlined what he called the “Two Sigma Problem” nearly 40 years ago. In his 1984 article entitled “The Search for Methods of Group Instruction as Effective as One-to-One Tutoring”, Bloom examined methods through which teachers might create conditions under group instruction that yield learning outcomes typically only experienced under ideal one-on-one tutoring conditions. This difference in results in one-to-one tutoring had been observed to be two standard deviations from the mean of group instruction. The problem, at the time, that Bloom was aiming to solve was a practical one: given the relatively high student-to-teacher ratios in even the best-funded institutes, how is it realistic to give every student the type of one-to-one tutoring and ongoing formative assessments that lead to cognitive mastery of a subject and therefore better performance? The answer to this question was that you could not practically solve the Two Sigma Problem.
This is where CBL environments like Noodle Factory’s “Walter” platform have the potential to impact BOTH teachers and students positively. With AI-powered CBL, teachers now have tools to work towards solving the Two Sigma Problem because they can scale. Thanks to the power of conversational AI, students have the means to engage in effective one-to-one tutoring at any hour, any place, on the device of their choice.
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We are also excited to announce that we will be adding GPT-3 capabilities to our award-winning AI teaching platform, Walter. Sign up to get a free trial today.