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Classroom Technology

Artificial Intelligence Is All Around Us. So This District Designed Its Own AI Curriculum

By Alyson Klein 鈥 August 15, 2022 9 min read
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The description of 鈥渁rtificial intelligence in high school鈥 may conjure up a science fiction novel where robots stand around chatting at their lockers.

The reality, at Seckinger High School in Gwinnett County, Ga., looks more like this: A social studies teacher pauses a lesson on the spread of cholera in the 19th century to discuss how data scientists use AI tools today to track diseases. A math class full of English-language learners uses machine learning to identify linear and non-linear shapes.

The simplest explanation of this technology is that it trains a machine to do tasks that simulate some of what the human brain can do. That means it can learn to do things like recognize faces and voices (helpful for radiology, security, and more), understand natural language, and even make recommendations. (Think of the algorithm Netflix uses to suggest your next binge-worthy TV show.)

While the Gwinnett County school district, which with more than 177,000 students is among the largest in the country, opened Seckinger high school this month to relieve overcrowding elsewhere, the focus of the school is unique. Seckinger is apparently the only high school in the country dedicated to teaching AI as part of its curriculum, not just as an elective class, according to CSforAll, a nonprofit group dedicated to expanding computer science education in schools across the country.

The district has also expanded the focus on artificial intelligence to three nearby elementary schools and a feeder middle school, creating an AI cluster. Ultimately, Gwinnett aims to expose kids to AI in every subject, as they move from kindergarten to 12th grade. Students who find themselves particularly drawn to the topic will get opportunities to delve even deeper into how artificial intelligence works and the ethical implications of using it.

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Experts think artificial intelligence could help people do all sorts of things over the next couple of decades: power self-driving cars, cure cancer, and yes, transform K-12 education.
Experts think artificial intelligence could help people do all sorts of things over the next couple of decades: power self-driving cars, cure cancer, and yes, transform K-12 education.
Getty

Through the cluster, Gwinnett plans to do more than just prepare kids for success in a hot corner of the job market: It wants to give them a critical window into how AI is reshaping nearly every aspect of the economy.

鈥淥ur students need to understand the implications of the technology that they are consuming, and how it鈥檚 being used on them so that they can make informed decisions,鈥 said Sallie Holloway, the district鈥檚 director of artificial intelligence and computer science. (Holloway said she鈥檚 never spoken to another district leader who had AI in a job title.)

Gwinnett is taking a 鈥渂old step to help students prepare for the present and the future,鈥 said Joseph South, the chief learning officer for the International Society for Technology in 91制片厂视频, a nonprofit group that runs the largest educational technology conference in the country.

鈥淲e talk like AI is coming,鈥 South said. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 actually already here. It鈥檚 all around us. There鈥檚 no part of our society that isn鈥檛 going to be touched by [AI]. To the extent that it鈥檚 invisible to us, we don鈥檛 have any power over it. It has power over us. To the extent that we understand it, and even better know how to design it, then we can start to partner with AI, instead of being controlled by AI.鈥

Gwinnett officials didn鈥檛 have to look far for examples of longstanding industries whose work had evolved to include an AI twist.

An agricultural machinery company headquartered in the county now calls itself a technology company, and utilizes self-driving tractors. An assistant superintendent stopped in at a nearby caf茅 where robots mixed the drinks, and the man behind the counter was an engineer, not a barista.

That drove home to district officials that the 鈥渒ids who graduated our high school who might have gone with traditional trades [in the past] are going to need some more technical AI-driven skills,鈥 Holloway said.

鈥榃e want them to be represented and to have a voice鈥

What鈥檚 more, they see embracing AI as particularly important for a district as diverse as Gwinnett.
It鈥檚 been well-documented that 鈥渋ntelligent鈥 machines reflect the same biases as the humans programming them. Facial recognition software powered by AI has had trouble picking up darker complexions. AI-driven risk-assessment algorithms used to figure out criminal sentences tend to make harsher predictions about Black defendants than white ones.

Those problems might not be so prevalent, experts say, if more of the engineers behind the technology came from the demographic groups that make up much of Gwinnett鈥檚 student population.

鈥淲e serve the students who are most underrepresented in the technology industry,鈥 Holloway said. Gwinnett鈥檚 students come from more than 180 countries, about a third are Black, and another third are Hispanic or Latino. About a third come from economically disadvantaged families.

鈥淲e want them to be represented and have a voice鈥 in how AI develops over the next few decades, when it鈥檚 expected to take on an even more central role in daily life, Holloway said.

One of the biggest challenges, which Holloway expects to be ongoing: There are little, if any, curricular materials out there for teaching AI to K-12 students, particularly for educators hoping to spotlight the technology in a range of subjects and grade levels.

When the district began considering its approach, 鈥渘o one else was thinking about this holistic idea of AI readiness, where it鈥檚 embedded in the classes,鈥 Holloway said. Experts 鈥渨ere talking about specific technical AI courses, like computer science courses.鈥

The problem is that not every kid 鈥渃an take those elective classes. So, every kid doesn鈥檛 get access to AI, if you only address it through an elective,鈥 Holloway said. 鈥淏ut if I embed it into all of the classes a student takes now, every single kid is going to get access to that critical learning that they need for future readiness. We just needed to create it ourselves.鈥

To inform that work, Gwinnett school district officials reached out to higher education institutions, such as the nearby Gwinnett College, Georgia Institute of Technology, and University of Georgia in addition to other schools outside the state like Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The district also turned to tech companies such as Apple, Google, IBM, and Microsoft as well as nonprofit groups AI4K12, CSForAll, and aiEDU for help.

鈥淓ven though we are doing the heavy lifting, we were lucky to have a ton of people who were interested,鈥 Holloway said.

Seckinger offers a series of three progressively sophisticated elective classes focused on AI. The first will provide a broad overview of the technology, including its history and evolution, impact on society, plus an introduction to more technical aspects. The second class will go deeper, and the third will have a significant project-based component, allowing students to put their knowledge of AI towards solving real world problems.

Teacher Jason Hurd is not only leading the courses, he鈥檚 playing a big part in writing them.

That鈥檚 meant 鈥渄eveloping something that doesn鈥檛 exist anywhere in the country, and potentially, the world,鈥 Hurd said.

Memorie Reesman, Seckinger鈥檚 principal, expects a significant chunk of students will take at least one AI course. But she doesn鈥檛 anticipate every Seckinger graduate will wind up in a Silicon Valley programming gig.

School and district officials think of Seckinger鈥檚 students in three different buckets: swimmers, who will get broad exposure to a range of AI-related topics across the curriculum; snorkelers, who might take a couple of the AI electives or delve deeper into the topic as part of another class; and scuba-divers, who will spend much of high school immersed in AI.

In all classes, teachers will be explicit about how their content鈥攕ocial studies, or even physical education鈥攖ouches on a range of topics key to helping students become 鈥淎I ready,鈥 including data science, mathematical reasoning, creative problem solving, and ethics.

鈥淲hat I love about it is it allows us as teachers that don鈥檛 teach just AI to be able to recognize that there鈥檚 so much that we do already鈥 that touches on the concepts behind the technology, said Cheri Nations, who teaches environmental engineering at Seckinger. 鈥淚t鈥檚 [about] being more intentional and authentic with it and tying it and making connections for the kids. Then, as we become more comfortable, we can start doing more of that deep diving.鈥

Teaching AI will be part of the school鈥檚 culture

Reesman has previewed how all this can work in her previous job as the principal of Glenn C. Jones Middle School, the feeder middle school in the AI cluster. The school started piloting the AI program about two years ago.

At first, Jones middle school students and teachers just played around with a few AI-related challenges during the 20-minute 鈥渉omeroom鈥 slot in their schedule, Reesman said, including a program from Amazon that allowed students to practice coding robots to do work in a warehouse.

Later, teachers in all subjects began mixing a bit of AI-related content into their classes. One of Reesman鈥檚 favorite examples: Seventh grade science students took a concept that鈥檚 long been part of their curriculum鈥攇enetics鈥攁nd used coding to figure out the probability of inheriting certain genetic traits.

There are going to be 鈥渟ome days where you鈥檙e gonna see [AI] really heavily鈥 in the cluster schools, Holloway said. But 鈥渋t may not always be like a very obvious, hit you in the face [realization], like, 鈥極h, we鈥檙e doing this in AI today.鈥 A lot of it鈥檚 going to show up in the culture of the school.鈥

That culture extends even to Seckinger鈥檚 furniture, which isn鈥檛 your typical desks in rows. Instead, most classrooms use a more flexible seating model, Holloway said.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e in circles, they鈥檙e in groups. Their work is all over their wall,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e having discussions and conversations and you might not know where the teacher is in the room because they may just be mixed in and talking with the kids.鈥 The goal is to make collaborative leadership skills and creative problem solving a central piece of every class.

Helping teachers make the cultural pivot will require time and experimentation, Holloway added.

鈥淧rofessional development doesn鈥檛 fix everything [and] there鈥檚 just a lot of priorities right now in the world of education,鈥 Holloway said. She鈥檚 explained to teachers, 鈥溾榳e鈥檙e going to try something different, and if we fail, that鈥檚 OK because we鈥檙e going to pause and learn and try to improve next time.鈥欌

Eventually, Gwinnett would like to see the curriculum model used throughout the district. And it could be poised to spread even further. The Georgia Department of 91制片厂视频 worked with Gwinnett to write academic standards for the new material so that schools anywhere in the Peach State can launch their own AI courses.

South, of ISTE, expects to see more schools around the country adopt AI as a curricular focus.

鈥淭here are entire universities devoted to AI in China,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is already a central part of our society, and we need to prepare citizens to understand it and design it. There鈥檚 no doubt in my mind this is going to grow.鈥

A version of this article appeared in the August 31, 2022 edition of 91制片厂视频 Week as Artificial Intelligence Is All Around Us. So This District Designed Its Own AI Curriculum

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