The time has come for Artificial Intelligence (AI)-driven teaching assistants to help ease a human teacher’s workload in the age of online learning, however, such virtual machines have to be effective and communicate well to be accepted by the society in a broad way, argue researchers.
The increase in online education has allowed a new type of teacher to emerge — an artificial one.
But just how accepting students are of an artificial instructor remains to be seen, said researchers at the University of Central Florida’s Nicholson School of Communication and Media who are working to examine student perceptions of AI-based teachers.
Some of their findings, published in the International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction, indicated that for students to accept an AI teaching assistant, it needs to be effective and easy to talk to.
“The hope is that by understanding how students relate to AI-teachers, engineers and computer scientists can design them to easily integrate into the education experience,” said Jihyun Kim, an associate professor in the school and lead author of the study.
AI teaching assistants can help ease a teacher’s workload, such as by responding to commonly-asked questions by students.
These questions, which often appear each semester and become numerous in online classes with hundreds of students, can become a large task for a teacher.
The quick delivery of answers also helps students.
“To use machine teachers effectively, we need to understand students’ perceptions toward machine teachers, their learning experiences with them and more,” Kim noted.
An example of an AI teaching assistant is one named Jill Watson that was created by a researcher at the Georgia Institute of Technology.
Jill was fed the thousands of questions and answers commonly asked in the researcher’s online class that he’d taught over the years.
With some additional learning and tweaks, Jill was eventually able to answer the students’ commonly asked questions accurately without any human assistance as if she was one of the researcher’s human teaching assistants.
For the study, the researchers asked respondents to read a news article about an AI teaching assistant used in higher education, and then they surveyed the students’ perceptions of the technology. (IANS)