• They don’t want literate people. The majority of American adults read below a sixth grade level, and about a quarter are functionally illiterate - source

      (Though my personal favorite statistic from that page is that 2/3 of illiterate Americans were born in the US, who often the same people who complain endlessly about immigrants speaking multiple languages)

  • Tempus Fugit@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    So the mega corps that need AI to be integrated into every facet of our society are now going to force feed AI down your children’s throats. Isn’t this country the best?

  • unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de
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    19 days ago

    With all this discourse about AI one thing just keeps being the best indicator for something being wrong: If it were so great and pefect, it wouldnt need to be forced into everything. People would just integrate it themselves.

  • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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    19 days ago

    AI literacy

    Meaning know less, understand less, depend on our product so you will become a good mindless drone that we can control?

    Seriously, what the fuck is there to know about AI for the average joe? Nothing, that is the entire point.

    This literally is about creating dependency and I would not allow my kids to have to follow such a shit education

    • quick_snail@feddit.nl
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      18 days ago

      I mean, it could be like information literacy

      The course would be sure to tell all kids that AI is not intelligent, should never be trusted, and teach kids how to fact check everything that it says.

      The end result should be that kids learn that it takes more work to get facts when using AI.

  • pipi1234@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    This is akin to promoting the use of a product as mandatory in the school system. Oh yes, line cow milk.

  • Avicenna@programming.dev
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    18 days ago

    How about including an AI disinformation in this literacy class? Or using AI as a search engine to do fact checking. But I think they really mean “use AI for everything in schools and feed the data back to us” classes.

    • quick_snail@feddit.nl
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      18 days ago

      You mean not using AI for fact checking?!?

      Like, teaching them how to fact check everything AI says, because it’s rubbish?

      • Avicenna@programming.dev
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        18 days ago

        I mean as a search engine it is more efficient than google as it stands. And it can give references. Like everything though it can be forced to be biased and enshittified so hard to predict if it will stay that way.

        • thedeadwalking4242@lemmy.world
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          18 days ago

          It’s not forced to be bias they have that inherently built in.

          And they will make up refrences all the time, or even “understand” wrong.

          LLMs have their use cases along side search engines but they aren’t replacement for them

  • quick_snail@feddit.nl
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    18 days ago

    They want to make future generations unable to think for themselves, and to be dependent on their tech their whole lives

  • Blaster M@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    The education needs to happen, but not for the reasons they are doing it - kids need to know how ai works so they know why it doesn’t in many cases. Disspelling the magic answer machine idea from everyone’s minds starts with learning how it works and how it doesn’t.

    • quick_snail@feddit.nl
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      18 days ago

      We don’t need a new course for this. It just needs to be appended to existing information literacy courses

    • Virtvirt588@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      Thats the one thing that is a necessary out of all of this. Its already out there, so learning the fundamentals and its limitations is the best case. It should be highly applicable to the concepts of LLMs which are broader and can be used for good purposes.

      Of course, the techy kids and even teenagers may dabble in AI in their free time, with a bit more thought put in. Even if gen alpha isnt the most fond with AI.

    • illi@piefed.social
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      18 days ago

      the best practices (actually learning the techinal not just “write these types of prompts.”)

      With Google and Microslop pushing for this, I imagine the important parts beyond “this is how you prompt” will somehow get left out.