Hello World #25 out now: Generative AI
Since they became publicly available at the end of 2022, generative AI tools have been hotly discussed by educators: what role should these tools for generating human-seeming text, images, and other media play in teaching and learning?
Two years later, the one thing most people agree on is that, like it or not, generative AI is here to stay. And as a computing educator, you probably have your learners and colleagues looking to you for guidance about this technology. We’re sharing how educators like you are approaching generative AI in issue 25 of Hello World, out today for free.
Generative AI and teaching
Since our ‘Teaching and AI’ issue a year ago, educators have been making strides grappling with generative AI’s place in their classroom, and with the potential risks to young people. In this issue, you’ll hear from a wide range of educators who are approaching this technology in different ways.
For example:
- Laura Ventura from Gwinnett County Public Schools (GCPS) in Georgia, USA shares how the GCPS team has integrated AI throughout their K–12 curriculum
- Mark Calleja from our team guides you through using the OCEAN prompt process to reliably get the results you want from an LLM
- Kip Glazer, principal at Mountain View High School in California, USA shares a framework for AI implementation aimed at school leaders
- Stefan Seegerer, a researcher and educator in Germany, discusses why unplugged activities help us focus on what’s really important in teaching about AI
This issue also includes practical solutions to problems that are unique to computer science educators:
- Graham Hastings in the UK shares his solution to tricky crocodile clips when working with micro:bits
- Riyad Dhuny shares his case study of home-hosting a learning management system with his students in Mauritius
And there is lots more for you to discover in issue 25.
Whether or not you use generative AI as part of your teaching practice, it’s important for you to be aware of AI technologies and how your young people may be interacting with it. In his article “A problem-first approach to the development of AI systems”, Ben Garside from our team affirms that:
“A big part of our job as educators is to help young people navigate the changing world and prepare them for their futures, and education has an essential role to play in helping people understand AI technologies so that they can avoid the dangers.
Our approach at the Raspberry Pi Foundation is not to focus purely on the threats and dangers, but to teach young people to be critical users of technologies and not passive consumers. […]
Our call to action to educators, carers, and parents is to have conversations with your young people about generative AI. Get to know their opinions on it and how they view its role in their lives, and help them to become critical thinkers when interacting with technology.”
Share your thoughts & subscribe to Hello World
Computing teachers are being asked again to teach something that they didn’t study. With generative AI as with all things computing, we want to support your teaching and share your successes. We hope you enjoy this issue of Hello World, and please get in touch with your article ideas or what you would like to see in the magazine.
- Share your thoughts and ideas about Hello World and the new issue with us on social media by tagging the Hello World Twitter/X or Facebook accounts
- Find out how you can write for the magazine
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We’d like to thank Oracle for supporting this issue.
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