S6E10 - Exploring AI in education: enhancements, ethics, and future directions w/ NCFE
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In this episode, James Lane, the Digital Sector Manager at NCFE, and Dr Gray Mytton, from the NCFE Innovation Team, discuss the evolving role of artificial intelligence within education and its broader implications.
Join the team as they discuss how AI, particularly generative AI, is currently being used by colleagues, and the wider education sector, primarily for routine tasks and as a creative brainstorming tool.
The conversation touches on the ethical considerations of AI, including security concerns and bias in AI training data. James and Gray also explore the potential future of AI in assessments, emphasising the importance of changing assessment models to integrate AI ethically and effectively.
The discussion concludes with insights into NCFE's innovative projects, including a generative AI exam builder and efforts to develop locally hosted large language models, presenting a forward-thinking approach to AI in education.
00:00 Introduction to AI at NCFE
01:50 Conversational AI and its applications
05:53 Exploring free AI tools and their evolution
07:37 Prompt engineering and AI tool comparisons
09:39 Ethical considerations in AI usage
16:19 AI in exam and assessment creation
21:27 Generating and using AI data sets
24:26 Security concerns and open source LLMs
26:31 Exploring user interfaces for local LLMs
28:01 Creating an internal document library
29:34 DIY vs. buying AI solutions
33:33 Training data and quality control
36:45 Using AI in exams and assessments: challenges and opportunities
42:11 Future of AI in Education
47:46 Conclusion and Final Thoughts
New here?
You've joined us in season 6 and, if you've enjoyed this conversation, you might want to visit our episode feed and subscribe to POD-CACHE for more. New episodes are published once a fortnight and there are lots of great conversations to catch up on.
Want to hear more from this week's guests?
You can find information about the Assessment Innovation Fund, discussed during the episode, on the NCFE website, and can read the OU Research report on developing robuse assessments using generative AI on the OU's law school website.
In addition, you might want to join Gray for this useful recorded session which explores current AI writing detectors, showing why their accuracy measures are hard to understand, the tools available to disguise AI outputs, and practical suggestions for the use of AI writing detectors in education.
If you enjoyed this podcast, please share it with your colleagues and remember to like, subscribe and leave us a review.
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