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Science & tech: educators warn that ai shortcuts are already

SCIENCE & TECH: Educators warn that AI shortcuts are already making kids lazy

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A new MIT study suggests that AI is degrading critical thinking skills โ€”ย which does not surprise educators one bit.

โ€œBrain atrophy does occur, and itโ€™s obvious,โ€ Dr. Susan Schneider, founding director of the Center for the Future Mind at Florida Atlantic University, told The Post. โ€œTalk to any professor in the humanities or social sciences and they will tell you that students who just throw in a prompt and hand in their paper are not learning.ย โ€œ

The MIT study used EEG scans to analyze brain activity in the three groups as they wrote their essays.

Researchers at MITโ€™s Media Lab found that individuals who wrote essays with the help of ChatGPT showed less brain activity while completing the task, committed less to memory and grew gradually lazier in the writing process over time.

A group of 54 18- to 39-year-olds were split into three cohort โ€” one using ChatGPT, one using Google search and one โ€œbrain-onlyโ€ โ€” and asked to write four SAT essays over the course of four months.

Scientists monitored their brain activity under EEG scans and found that the ChatGPT group had the lowest brain engagement when writing and showed lower executive control and attention levels.

Dr. Susan Schneider says heavy AI use is degrading her studentsโ€™ thinking skills.

Over four sessions, the participants in the studyโ€™s Chat GPT group started to use AI differently. At first, they generally asked for broad and minimal help, like with structure. But near the end of the study period, they were more likely to resort to copying and pasting entire sections of writing.

Murphy Kenefick, a high-school literature teacher in Nashville, said he has seen first-hand how studentsโ€™ โ€œcritical thinking and attention spans have been demolished by AI.

โ€œItโ€™s especially a problem with essays, and itโ€™s a fight every assignment,โ€ he told The Post. โ€œIโ€™ve caught it about 40 times, and who knows how many other times theyโ€™ve gotten away with it.โ€

Eight researchers affiliated with the MIT Media Lab complex carried out the study over four months. Andy Ryan/ MIT
Experts are concerned that students who grow up with AI could have their thinking skills especially stunted. Rawpixel.com โ€“ stock.adobe.com

In the MIT study, the โ€œbrain-onlyโ€ group had the โ€œstrongest, wide-ranging networksโ€ in their brain scans, showing heightened activity in regions associated with creativity, memory and language processing. They also expressed more engagement, satisfaction and ownership of their work.

โ€œThere is a strong negative correlation between AI tool usage and critical thinking skills, with younger users exhibiting higher dependence on AI tools and consequently lower cognitive performance scores,โ€ the studyโ€™s authors warn. โ€œThe impact extends beyond academic settings into broader cognitive development.โ€



Asked to rewrite prior essays, the ChatGPT group was least able to recall them, suggesting they didnโ€™t commit them to memory as strongly as other groups.

High-school literature teacher Murphy Kenefick fears his students wouldnโ€™t even care about the studyโ€™s findings. Courtest of Murphy Kenefick
Nataliya Kosmyna of MIT Media Labs was the lead researcher for the study. MIT

The ChatGPT group also tended to produce more similar essays, prompting two English teachers brought in to evaluate the essays to characterize them as โ€œsoullessโ€ โ€” something teachers all over the country say they are seeing more regularly.

Robert Black, who retired last week from teaching AP and IB high school history in Canandaigua, New York, said that the last two years of his 34-year career were a โ€œnightmare because of ChatGPT.โ€

โ€œWhen caught, kids just shrug,โ€ he said. โ€œThey canโ€™t even fathom why it is wrong or why the writing process is important.โ€

Researchers and experts are especially concerned about the degradation of critical thinking skills in young people due to AI usage. Gorodenkoff โ€“ stock.adobe.com
The MIT study found that subjects within the ChatGPT group tended to produce more similar essays, prompting two English teachers brought in to evaluate the essays to characterize them as โ€œsoullessโ€ Inna โ€“ stock.adobe.com

Black also points out AI has only worsened a gradual trend of degrading skills that he attributes to smartphones.

โ€œEven before ChatGPT it was harder and harder to get them to think out a piece of writing โ€” brainstorming, organizing and composing,โ€ he told The Post. โ€œNow that has become a total foolโ€™s errand.โ€

Psychologist Jean Twenge, the author of โ€œ10 Rules for Raising Kids in a High-Tech World,โ€ agrees that AI is just one additional barrier to learning for Gen Z and Gen Alpha.

She points out that international math, reading and science standardized test scores have been on the decline for years, which she attributes to pandemic lockdown and the advent of smartphones and social media.



Dr. Jean Twenge says that smartphones and now artificial intelligence pose a threat to youth learning.
Dr. Jean M. Twenge is author of the forthcoming book โ€œ10 Rules for Raising Kids in a High-Tech World.โ€

โ€œWith the addition of AI, academic performance will likely decline further, as students who regularly use AI to write essays are not learning how to write,โ€ Twenge told The Post. โ€œWhen you donโ€™t learn how to write, you donโ€™t learn how to think deeply.โ€

The MIT study study was spearheaded by Media Lab research scientist Nataliya Kosmyna, who told Time Magazine that โ€œdeveloping brains are at the highest risk.โ€

While Toby Walsh, Chief Scientist at the University of New South Wales AI Institute in Sydney, Australia, acknowledges that the studyโ€™s findings are frightening, he also warns educators against outright banning it.ย 

AI professor Toby Walsh says that educators need to learn to integrate AI carefully.

โ€œWe have to be mindful that there are great opportunities. Iโ€™m actually incredibly jealous of what students have today,โ€ Walsh said, recalling his 15-year-old daughter recently using an AI voice to ask her questions in French as a study aide.

โ€œI donโ€™t think we should be banning AI,โ€ Walsh said. But, he added, โ€œthe concern is that AI surpasses human intelligence, not because AI got better but because human intelligence got worse.โ€

Kenefick, meanwhile, imagines his students โ€œwouldnโ€™t careโ€ about the studyโ€™s findings: โ€œThey just want the grade. They see no real incentive to develop any useful skills. Itโ€™s very troubling.โ€



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