N.J. professor: AI won’t replace learning if we prepare students to lead, not cheat

@River News

N.J. professor: AI won’t replace learning if we prepare students to lead, not cheat
Section:/Opinion
  • 📰 njdotcom
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 236 sec. here
  • 6 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 101%
  • Publisher: 63%

Schools must adopt clear value statements about learning and academic integrity and ensure that students have the social-emotional competencies to use the technology in prosocial ways .“

OpenAI’s ChatGPT Atlas browser integrates AI directly into web navigation, offering features like real-time summaries and automated task handling. AI has the potential to short-circuit the learning process for many students by giving them a tool that will do much of their work for them.

To avoid this, schools must adopt clear value statements about learning and academic integrity and ensure that students have the social-emotional competencies to use the technology in prosocial ways “even when no one is looking.” Neither the requisite value statements nor emphasis on students’ social-emotional competencies are the norm in schools at present. Putting emphasis on the students is not an example of “blaming the victim.” Most technological innovations — and certainly AI —should be conceptualized as “operator dependent.” A clear way to understand this is to consider a Stradivarius, certainly an innovation in the creation of violins. Stradivari are operator dependent — the sound they produce depends on the human being “operating” the instrument. Different humans will generate different sounds from the same instrument. It is therefore appropriate to consider the instrument and the player as a single unit of analysis. Evaluating the impact of either depends on the joint impact of both. The same has been true throughout the history of technological innovation — writing, the printing press, the telegraph, radio, telephone, and smart phones come quickly to mind — and is true for AI. We must look not only at the innovation but also the “operator.” Characteristics of the operator tend to be neglected in considering the impact of innovations, particularly those that are technological in nature. This cannot be the case with AI. Education systems are far from embracing the systematic teaching of the skills needed to prepare students to use AI constructively and ethically, which include empathy, problem solving, emotional self-control, capability of working in many different kinds of groups, organization, focus, and emotional self-awareness. Further, we cannot assume that children — or anyone — will direct their social-emotional skills for prosocial ends. As Theodore Roosevelt said, in a speech in Harrisburg, PA, Oct. 4, 1906: “To educate a person in mind and not in morals is to create a menace to society.” Martin Luther King, Jr. updated this in 1947: “The function of education, therefore, is to teach one to think intensively and to think critically. But education which stops with efficiency may prove the greatest menace to society. The most dangerous criminal may be the person gifted with reason , but with no morals.”Cyberbullying involves the use of social media technology to spread harmful, often vindictive, degrading, insulting, and false information about other people. Often, those individuals are members of “protected classes” who are reluctant to disclose what is happening to them. Estimates are that almost 30% of students in the United States have experienced cyberbullying at least once. Responses to cyberbullying include monitoring of children’s use of technology and social media, but what matters most is children’s moral compass and social-emotional problem-solving skills.Do they understand the short and long-term consequences of their actions for others, as well as the risks to their own reputation, freedoms, and privileges?Do they know their own emotions and their own goals?We also must ask where they received the idea that abusing others is a good and reasonable thing to do. Is bullying tolerated in their classroom and school environments? Have they heard messages from influential adults in their lives that certain individuals “deserve” to be maltreated because they are somehow “less than” others? Looking ahead, ensuring the use of AI with integrity and in ethical ways represents at least as great a challenge as implementing its technology. The human operators of AI-infused learning systems must learn to use it with academic integrity, to find information and arrive at answers, not having them generated by AI engines. This requires schools to invest in systematic efforts to improve their humane culture and climate, articulate core values around honesty and integrity, and build students’ social-emotional problem-solving skills and their application across academic subject areas. Let’s equip all of our students to pick up the Stradivarius of AI and use it to make their own, unique, beautiful music. Maurice J. Elias, Ph.D., is an award-winning professor of Psychology at Rutgers in New Brunswick and is on the Leadership Teams of SEL4US, SEL4NJ, and the Academy for Social-Emotional Learning in Schools.If you purchase a product or register for an account through a link on our site, we may receive compensation.and agree that your clicks, interactions, and personal information may be collected, recorded, and/or stored by us and social media and other third-party partners in accordance with our

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

njdotcom /  🏆 282. in US

Section:/Opinion

 

United States Latest News, United States Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Texas Lt. Gov. Donates $1 Million to Expand Turning Point USA Chapters in State SchoolsTexas Lt. Gov. Donates $1 Million to Expand Turning Point USA Chapters in State SchoolsTexas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick announced a $1 million donation to support the establishment of Turning Point USA chapters in every high school and university across Texas. Patrick stated that the donation was inspired by his admiration for Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk and his mission to promote freedom and free markets among students.
Read more »

Some states now require public schools to teach kids about gun safetySome states now require public schools to teach kids about gun safetyThis school year, students in elementary, middle and high schools in some states will get a new lesson on safety: what to do if they find a firearm.
Read more »

Several states now require public schools to teach kids about gun safetySeveral states now require public schools to teach kids about gun safetyThe Associated Press
Read more »

Banning Phones in Schools Is Drastically Changing the Behavior of Kids, Teachers SayBanning Phones in Schools Is Drastically Changing the Behavior of Kids, Teachers SaySchools around the world are banning phones, and the results can be unexpected. For instance, schools are getting loud again.
Read more »

Some states now require public schools to teach kids about gun safetySome states now require public schools to teach kids about gun safetyArkansas, Tennessee and Utah passed laws requiring schools to teach children as young as 5 the basics of gun safety and how to properly store guns at home.
Read more »

Madison City Schools rezoning: 1,700 students likely moving schools; see new zoning mapMadison City Schools rezoning: 1,700 students likely moving schools; see new zoning mapMadison City Schools Board passes rezoning map.
Read more »



Render Time: 2026-04-01 09:07:02