Should Robots Replace Teachers?. Neil Selwyn
section id="u8f7f9898-33ef-569f-81cb-e3cc18149ef3">
CONTENTS
1 Cover
4 1 AI, Robotics and the Automation of Teaching Robots and artificial intelligence Teachers and teaching AI and teaching – big hopes and complex issues AI and education – seeing the bigger picture The need to be critical Conclusions Notes
5 2 Physical Robots in the Classroom Robots in the classroom The potential and practicalities of classroom robots How it ‘feels’ to be taught by a non-human The ethics of robot teachers The politics of robot teachers Conclusions Notes
6 3 Intelligent Tutoring and Pedagogical Assistants The rise of the ‘intelligent tutor’ The first wave of pedagogical agents Current trends in pedagogical agents The potential and practicalities of pedagogical agents A reduced synthetic experience? Manipulating individual action The ethical dilemma of the robot teacher Conclusions Notes
7 4 ‘Behind-the-Scenes’ Technologies Digital automations of contemporary teaching The potential and practicalities of automated educational software Holding data to account The inequalities of individualization The labour politics of automated teaching Conclusions Notes
8 5 Revitalizing Teaching for the AI Age What computers can (and can’t) do in education Restating the case for human teachers Recognizing AI as a double-edged sword What next? AI as a chance to renegotiate education Conclusions Notes
9 Index
Guide
1 Cover
Pages
1 ii
2 iii
3 iv
4 vi
5 vii
6 viii
7 ix
8 x
9 xi
10 xii
11 xiii
12 1
13 2
14 3
15 4