Should Robots Replace Teachers?. Neil Selwyn

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      The digital automation of teaching is set to be one of the defining educational challenges of the next twenty years. While the deployment of human-looking robots in classrooms remains more of a publicity stunt than a serious educational trend, many other forms of digital automation are being implemented across schools and universities around the world. Teachers are not being replaced by physical robots per se, but are increasingly surrounded by software, apps, platforms and other forms of artificial intelligence designed to carry out pedagogical tasks.

      These are no longer frivolous or far-fetched questions. Powerful technologies are now being designed to autonomously support various types of learning – from infants picking up their first words through to physicians honing their surgical skills. A billion-dollar ‘EdTech’ market continues to grow as investors, developers and self-styled ‘edu-preneurs’ strive to overturn traditional modes of education, while also making tidy profits. The matter of how people learn (and, it follows, how people are supported in their learning) continues to be an area that is widely considered ready for innovation, reform and ‘disruption’. The long-held professional status of school teachers and university lecturers is definitely under threat.

      Titling this book toward ‘should’ rather than ‘could’ moves the discussion into the realm of values, judgements and politics – reminding us that the integration of any technology into society should always be approached as a choice. The fact that automated teaching technologies are now being designed and developed does not mean that they will inevitably be used in consistent ways with predetermined outcomes. History shows that technological change is non-linear, contingent and influenced by the different social contexts in which it is implemented. The ways in which technology unfolds across societies are never fully predictable or knowable. This uncertainty is what makes the prospect of any new digital technology exciting (but also dangerous). As such, it is crucial that we consider the possibility of alternative technological pathways and different digital futures for education.

      1. Judy Wajcman, ‘Automation: is it really different this time?’, The British Journal of Sociology 68:1 (2017): 126.

      Many thanks to Sofia Serholt for helping me make sense of the issues around physical robots in the classroom. Thanks also to Selena Nemorin for her initial efforts to get me interested in issues around robots and AI. Thanks to Dragan Gašević and Carlo Perrotta for their conversations about computer science and the finer points of AI, machine learning and data science. Readers from the AIED community included two anonymous readers recruited by Polity Press – both of whom were very generous in providing helpful comments on a book that they clearly did not fully agree with. Thanks also to colleagues at the Monash Faculty of Education who have helped me get to grips with the issues around teachers and teaching. These include Paul Richardson and Jennifer Bleazby. I would also like to thank Mary Savigar and Ellen MacDonald-Kramer at Polity for initially pitching the title, and for their subsequent editorial support.

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