A general policy challenge, thus, is to increase among
educators and policymakers awareness of AI technologies and their potential
impact. One way of doing this is to participate in processes that generate images of
future, develop concepts that can be used to describe them, and design scenarios and
experiments where such imagined futures can be tested. A rather simple proposal for
policy development, thus, is to launch explicitly future-oriented processes that generate
understanding of the possibilities of the present.
AI provides new means for research on learning, but it is also important to rethink the
capabilities of AI systems using existing knowledge about learning.
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In particular, almost
all currently developed AI systems rely on associative and behaviouristic models of
learning. The long history of neural AI contains many attempts to go beyond these
simple models of learning. Learning sciences could have much to offer to research
on AI, and such mutual interaction would enable better understanding about
how to use AI for learning and in educational settings, as well as in other
domains of application.
Data that is needed for machine learning is often highly personal. If it is used for
assessing student performance, data security can become a key bottleneck in using AI,
learning analytics, and educational data mining. As neural AI systems do not understand
the data they process, it is also easy to forge data that fools the decision process.
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AI
security is an important topic, but it is also challenging as neural AI systems typically use
complex internal representations of data that are difficult or impossible to interpret.
Because of this there is now considerable interest in creating “explainable AI.” The
current systems, however, lack all the essential reflective and metacognitive capabilities
that would be needed to explain what they do or don’t do.
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To rephrase Descartes, it is,
therefore, as futile to ask a clock on the wall why it just struck seven or eight as it is to
ask a deep learning AI system why it gave a specific grade to a student. Clocks are not
built to explain their ticking, and AI systems, as we know them, have no explanatory
capabilities. At best they can support humans in explaining what happened and why. As
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