<p>Know-it-all chatbots landed with a bang last year, convincing one engineer that machines had become sentient, spreading panic that industries could be wiped out, and creating fear of a cheating epidemic in schools and universities.</p>.<p>Alarm among educators has reached fever pitch in recent weeks over ChatGPT, an easy-to-use artificial intelligence tool trained on billions of words and a ton of data from the web.</p>.<p>It can write a half-decent essay and answer many common classroom questions, sparking a fierce debate about the very future of traditional education.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/openai-creator-of-chatgpt-casts-spell-on-microsoft-1180969.html" target="_blank">OpenAI, creator of ChatGPT, casts spell on Microsoft</a></strong></p>.<p>New York City's education department banned ChatGPT on its networks because of "concerns about negative impacts on student learning".</p>.<p>"While the tool may be able to provide quick and easy answers to questions, it does not build critical-thinking and problem-solving skills," said the department's Jenna Lyle.</p>.<p>A group of Australian universities said they would change exam formats to banish AI tools, regarding them as straight-up cheating.</p>.<p>However, some in the education sector are more relaxed about AI tools in the classroom, and some even sense an opportunity rather than a threat.</p>.<p>That is partly because ChatGPT in its current form still gets stuff wrong.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/microsoft-in-talks-to-invest-10-billion-in-chatgpt-owner-report-1179519.html" target="_blank">Microsoft in talks to invest $10 billion in ChatGPT owner: Report</a></strong></p>.<p>To give one example, it thinks Guatemala is bigger than Honduras. It isn't.</p>.<p>Also, ambiguous questions can throw it off track.</p>.<p>Ask the tool to describe the Battle of Amiens and it will give a passable detail or two on the 1918 confrontation from World War I.</p>.<p>But it does not flag that there was also a skirmish of the same name in 1870. It takes several prompts to realise its error.</p>.<p>"ChatGPT is an important innovation, but no more so than calculators or text editors," French author and educator Antonio Casilli told AFP.</p>.<p>"ChatGPT can help people who are stressed by a blank sheet of paper to write a first draft, but afterwards they still have to write and give it a style."</p>.<p>Researcher Olivier Ertzscheid from the University of Nantes agreed that teachers should be focusing on the positives.</p>.<p>In any case, he told AFP, high school students were already using ChatGPT, and any attempt to ban it would just make it more appealing.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/technology/a-new-area-of-ai-booms-even-amid-the-tech-gloom-1178753.html" target="_blank">A new area of AI booms, even amid the tech gloom</a></strong></p>.<p>Teachers should instead "experiment with the limits" of AI tools, he said, by generating texts themselves and analysing the results with their students.</p>.<p>But there is also another big reason to think that educators do not need to panic yet.</p>.<p>AI writing tools have long been locked in an arms race with programs that seek to sniff them out, and ChatGPT is no different.</p>.<p>A couple of weeks ago, an amateur programmer announced he had spent his new year holiday creating an app that could analyse texts and decide if they were written by ChatGPT.</p>.<p>"There's so much chatgpt hype going around," Edward Tian wrote on Twitter.</p>.<p>"Is this and that written by AI? We as humans deserve to know!"</p>.<p>His app, GPTZero, is not the first in the field and is unlikely to be the last.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/panorama/ai-challenges-pedagogy-learning-assessments-1177049.html" target="_blank">AI challenges pedagogy, learning assessments</a></strong></p>.<p>Universities already use software that detects plagiarism, so it does not take a huge leap of imagination to see a future where each essay is rammed through an AI-detector.</p>.<p>Campaigners are also floating the idea of digital watermarks or other forms of signifier that will identify AI work.</p>.<p>And OpenAI, the company that owns ChatGPT, said it was already working on a "statistical watermark" prototype.</p>.<p>This suggests that educators will be fine in the long run.</p>.<p>But Casilli, for one, still believes the impact of such tools has a huge symbolic significance.</p>.<p>It partly upended the rules of the game, whereby teachers ask their pupils questions, he said.</p>.<p>Now, the student questions the machine before checking everything in the output.</p>.<p>"Every time new tools appear we start to worry about potential abuses, but we have also found ways to use them in our teaching," said Casilli.</p>
<p>Know-it-all chatbots landed with a bang last year, convincing one engineer that machines had become sentient, spreading panic that industries could be wiped out, and creating fear of a cheating epidemic in schools and universities.</p>.<p>Alarm among educators has reached fever pitch in recent weeks over ChatGPT, an easy-to-use artificial intelligence tool trained on billions of words and a ton of data from the web.</p>.<p>It can write a half-decent essay and answer many common classroom questions, sparking a fierce debate about the very future of traditional education.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/openai-creator-of-chatgpt-casts-spell-on-microsoft-1180969.html" target="_blank">OpenAI, creator of ChatGPT, casts spell on Microsoft</a></strong></p>.<p>New York City's education department banned ChatGPT on its networks because of "concerns about negative impacts on student learning".</p>.<p>"While the tool may be able to provide quick and easy answers to questions, it does not build critical-thinking and problem-solving skills," said the department's Jenna Lyle.</p>.<p>A group of Australian universities said they would change exam formats to banish AI tools, regarding them as straight-up cheating.</p>.<p>However, some in the education sector are more relaxed about AI tools in the classroom, and some even sense an opportunity rather than a threat.</p>.<p>That is partly because ChatGPT in its current form still gets stuff wrong.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/microsoft-in-talks-to-invest-10-billion-in-chatgpt-owner-report-1179519.html" target="_blank">Microsoft in talks to invest $10 billion in ChatGPT owner: Report</a></strong></p>.<p>To give one example, it thinks Guatemala is bigger than Honduras. It isn't.</p>.<p>Also, ambiguous questions can throw it off track.</p>.<p>Ask the tool to describe the Battle of Amiens and it will give a passable detail or two on the 1918 confrontation from World War I.</p>.<p>But it does not flag that there was also a skirmish of the same name in 1870. It takes several prompts to realise its error.</p>.<p>"ChatGPT is an important innovation, but no more so than calculators or text editors," French author and educator Antonio Casilli told AFP.</p>.<p>"ChatGPT can help people who are stressed by a blank sheet of paper to write a first draft, but afterwards they still have to write and give it a style."</p>.<p>Researcher Olivier Ertzscheid from the University of Nantes agreed that teachers should be focusing on the positives.</p>.<p>In any case, he told AFP, high school students were already using ChatGPT, and any attempt to ban it would just make it more appealing.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/technology/a-new-area-of-ai-booms-even-amid-the-tech-gloom-1178753.html" target="_blank">A new area of AI booms, even amid the tech gloom</a></strong></p>.<p>Teachers should instead "experiment with the limits" of AI tools, he said, by generating texts themselves and analysing the results with their students.</p>.<p>But there is also another big reason to think that educators do not need to panic yet.</p>.<p>AI writing tools have long been locked in an arms race with programs that seek to sniff them out, and ChatGPT is no different.</p>.<p>A couple of weeks ago, an amateur programmer announced he had spent his new year holiday creating an app that could analyse texts and decide if they were written by ChatGPT.</p>.<p>"There's so much chatgpt hype going around," Edward Tian wrote on Twitter.</p>.<p>"Is this and that written by AI? We as humans deserve to know!"</p>.<p>His app, GPTZero, is not the first in the field and is unlikely to be the last.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/panorama/ai-challenges-pedagogy-learning-assessments-1177049.html" target="_blank">AI challenges pedagogy, learning assessments</a></strong></p>.<p>Universities already use software that detects plagiarism, so it does not take a huge leap of imagination to see a future where each essay is rammed through an AI-detector.</p>.<p>Campaigners are also floating the idea of digital watermarks or other forms of signifier that will identify AI work.</p>.<p>And OpenAI, the company that owns ChatGPT, said it was already working on a "statistical watermark" prototype.</p>.<p>This suggests that educators will be fine in the long run.</p>.<p>But Casilli, for one, still believes the impact of such tools has a huge symbolic significance.</p>.<p>It partly upended the rules of the game, whereby teachers ask their pupils questions, he said.</p>.<p>Now, the student questions the machine before checking everything in the output.</p>.<p>"Every time new tools appear we start to worry about potential abuses, but we have also found ways to use them in our teaching," said Casilli.</p>