აჰმეტ მურატ კილიჩი: ევროპის საბჭოს ციფრული ტრანსფორმაციისა და ელექტრონული სწავლების განყოფილების ხელმძღვანელი;
Abstract:
The Council of Europe’s view on and response to Artificial Intelligence in Education
Artificial intelligence, data analytics, and related technologies have potential for impacting positively on education. AI systems might be used to support teaching and learning, for all learners including children and lifelong learners as well as those who have special needs, while data analytics might help us better understand how learning happens. On the other hand, these emerging technologies might also impact negatively on education, automating poor pedagogic practices, disempowering teachers and learners, and undermining human rights. They could also lead to the downgrading of what is valued, with knowledge transfer and easily measured competencies being preferenced over the more humanistic and democratic values (learning that affirms human worth and dignity, reason, compassion, morality, and ethics) that are harder to turn into numerical data.
While other international organisations have explored the ethical impact of Artificial Intelligence on humanity, and in a very limited way the ethics of AI in education, none have yet taken a holistic approach to the broader impacts (especially in terms of human rights, democracy, and the rule of law) of the application and teaching of AI in education.
The Council of Europe takes a critical view of the use of artificial intelligence in education and invites education policy makers in Europe to be vigilant and proactive. They need to take common action if they wish to harness the potential of artificial intelligence in education while ensuring the well-being of young people and their right to education.