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Ezekiel Dixon-Román – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
If psychometrics has long concerned itself with validity, reliability, and fairness, then what could psychometrics learn from the cybernetic theories of AI? Through engagement with Burstein's (2023) Responsible AI Standards, this paper unpacks some paradigmatic differences between psychometrics and cybernetics, points to how recursivity and…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Psychometrics, Theories, Standards
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Bruce Moghtader – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
This article offers a historical inquiry into behaviorism and its impact on standard of judgement concerning education policies. Drawing from Aldous Huxley's reservation towards behaviorism as a scientific movement that naturalizes the role of control in human affairs, the paper maps the impact of behaviorism on economics of education. By tracing…
Descriptors: Behaviorism, Economics, Human Capital, Educational Policy
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Shayan Doroudi – Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2023
When the Learning Sciences emerged in 1991, there was an ethos of studying learning in humans and machines in conjunction with one another. This ethos reflected three decades of prior work on the interdisciplinary study of learning; however, in the three decades since the emergence of the Learning Sciences, it seems to have largely disappeared. I…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Educational Research, Man Machine Systems, Learning Processes
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Nicola Robertson – Prism: Casting New Light on Learning, Theory & Practice, 2022
There is no denying that the influence and use of technology in relation to teaching and learning increased significantly during the Co-Vid-19 periods of isolation and lockdown. The screen became the classroom; the teacher (and the students), rendered as apparitions of virtuality. Nevertheless, despite the barriers of distance and screen, there…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Electronic Learning, Robotics, Computer Assisted Instruction
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Tilak, Shantanu; Glassman, Michael – Distance Education, 2020
Current distance education practices can be susceptible to the types of content-heavy, top-down instruction often seen in physical classrooms. These practices are similar to the activities of corporations, which use recommendation systems and game theory to mold the public sphere and fragment it. We propose that free knowledge creation through…
Descriptors: Democracy, Internet, Distance Education, Thinking Skills
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Ken Lindblom; Alexandra Rivera; Michael Radice – English Journal, 2020
The science of artificial intelligence, or AI, is leaping ahead as more resources are focused on its promise. In this article, the authors discuss the ways in which we have explored significant, critical questions about AI in a college literature course through reading young adult (YA) novels. Although it's improving, AI or machine intelligence is…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Adolescent Literature, Language Arts, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
Ansari, Fazel; Seidenberg, Ulrich – International Association for Development of the Information Society, 2016
This paper discusses the complementarity of human and cyber physical production systems (CPPS). The discourse of complementarity is elaborated by defining five criteria for comparing the characteristics of human and CPPS. Finally, a management portfolio matrix is proposed for examining the feasibility of optimal collaboration between them. The…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Cybernetics, Feasibility Studies, Human Factors Engineering