I love the time-saving implications of this for teachers, but in concerns to the students I'm somewhat skeptical how well they will actually retain this information. This is essentially a form of speed-learning, and studies have shown that the retention rate of speed-learning programs like this is incredibly short-term.
Sal Khan will be considered one of the most influential minds in Education in this 21st Century, just like Paulo Freiré or Maria Montessori were education revolutionaries of the past century.
@rarephoenix agreed as an artist and an electrical engineering student. I'm very unique in that im a artist and a logical person at the same time. But rarely do the 2 sides of my brain combine into a logical creative idea but those ideas are typically the best just super rare. Being creative in my opinion involves just doing stuff with some thinking involved but not a lot. While logical stuff is more about thinking before doing so you ethier do before you think completely or think before you do completely.
What I have appreciated about computer tutors to teach students who may be a little slow, is that the computer NEVER loses patience, never sighs and says, "Do it again . . " etc. Students are never embarassed.
This is incredible. As a former teacher, I would have loved this additional resource. I utilized all of the tech available at the time (up through 2016). I also trained my 4th grade students to utilize both software and hardware in the classroom (Google products, Khan Academy, tablets, PC’s, Padlet student response system, etc). Thank you, Sal Khan and team, for all of your hard work. Students are benefitting tremendously from all that you are creating.
I agree. This is impressive and full of upsides. Google's search AI has _really_ been impressing me for months now. But I have ask you and others, as educators, if you are concerned that this could ultimately replace educators completely?
I like how it is very targeted to the student's individual capabilities. There is no way a teacher can do that with 30 kids in the room. But I do believe that teachers will still be needed to facilitate the learning process.
Seeing these young students talk so positively about learning gives me great hope for their future. Sal Khan has done an incredible amount to democratize education across the world. His impact is hard to fathom.
This is the beginning of a revolution that will change the world. I feel like I'm watching the first railroad train 200 years ago. In a few years every kid will have the kind of private tutor that only the rich can afford now.
I worry that the rich will still own all the AIs, so they will decide what our kids are and aren't taught. Khan Academy on the face of it is a good organization but I can't honestly say who the CEO is, where he came from, what his goals and ambitions are in life etc. (edit: A year ago the CEO was doing a TED talk on how AI in education is the best thing ever. Today he's selling an AI to educators. Follow the money. This is not about the betterment of children, nor about educating the public on AI.) But what about when Walmart AI comes out, and Starbucks AI, and now your kid at public school is being taught by the SamAI Sam's Club assistant, who teaches your child the importance of buying at big chain stores.
@@Kvltklassikthat’s true but the open source community is already huge . Once smaller models are made that can run on average hardware without the NEED for OpenAi servers or others processing the data it’ll be golden. As of yet, OpenAI, Google, Meta, etc could cut the tap and we’d all be without our precious AI :P
YEAH and good ones will only be afforded by the rich... just like now! this is nothing new... this is nothing revolutionary. this is just something shiney
Not quite. Private tutors are humans who can care about the kid, and give encouragement, talk about real life, and help boost the kid's social skills and confidence. I'm not knocking this tool at all! But it is not identical to a human.
This is just mind blowing. Being an ICT tutor, I see endless possibilities with this:planning, evaluation, thought process guide, feedback and research. 🎉
I’m in uni now and still find myself going back to khan academy not because my teacher cant teach me but because i am a student among 300 others they dont have time to teach every single one and i cant afford a tutor so stuff like this is fantastic
Exactly. The technology is great…and it will be used to increase class sizes and make that lack of individualized human attention from a teacher worse.
It's fascinating to see how the narrative surrounding Sal Khan has evolved over time. For years, the story was that he started as a humble UA-camr, creating educational videos to help his cousins with their studies. This grassroots origin story resonated deeply with people, embodying a relatable, selfless mission to make learning accessible. However, as Khan Academy grew and attracted major support, including grants from figures like Bill Gates, the focus of his introduction shifted. Now, much of the emphasis is on his prestigious academic background from MIT, lending additional credibility to his expertise. While both narratives are true, the change highlights how stories can be reframed to suit evolving audiences and objectives, but there's something truly remarkable about remembering the humble beginnings that made the whole journey possible.
6:03 Khanmigo is leading the way in exploring digital teaching skills with Ai technology (education will never be the same again, how awesome) 6:22 Wow 😮! This is very innovative! Getting direct feedback of the students performance in detail form is useful and innovative. This methodology is the future of teaching. 9:57 This Vision capability of Chatgpt is revolutionary (it's like sci-fi stuff) and very creative. Imagine parents using Chatgpt to monitor and gauge their children's overall progress in their education (at least for those who are concerned) at home after a school day.
My dad recently introduced me to Khan Academy, and I am learning to do coding, which is part of computer software development, which is what my dad did for a living
This is amazing! I had a hard time learning the way schools teach and I use khan academy as an adult to relearn fundamental skills I never learned properly. If they open this up to parents of neurodivergent children, this can be a game changer. I needed help learning the material a different way and this would have been something that answered all my questions.
I love AI because it answers all my questions tirelessly without judgement. So, im learning how there's no such thing as a stupid question. In classroom one feels more cautious though i tried to push that, too because i love critical thinking and discovering connections between ideas.
I'd been using AI to teach my junior/senior level undergraduate class this year 2024. The tool is good, but the user has to be better than the AI to check if its output. You'll always need to have an expert to check the output as Sal showed the triangle problem. Teacher will always be needed.
The future of education seems to be shifting dramatically, and not always for the better. Instead of nurturing qualified teachers who inspire, guide, and engage students directly, we might find classrooms filled with facilitators merely managing AI-driven software. It's a sobering thought-trading the irreplaceable connection between a passionate teacher and their students for the cold efficiency of machines. Imagine a world where classrooms are bursting at the seams, and the magic of individualized attention fades away. True engagement, the kind that sparks curiosity and fosters a lifelong love of learning, could be replaced by impersonal algorithms. What a loss it would be not to invest in smaller class sizes, where every student could be truly seen, heard, and challenged by a teacher who understands their unique potential. Teachers are more than deliverers of content; they are mentors, motivators, and role models. No AI can replicate that. This trajectory, if left unchallenged, could rob future generations of the transformative power of human connection in education.
As a teacher, I wholeheartedly agree! Instead of focusing on the real problem, which is to reduce class sizes and hire more teachers with a decent pay, we just seem to give up and say let the machines take over. It makes my life easier for now but soon I might be teaching a thousand students since each kid has a personal tutor and who needs a teacher anyways. This is of course the negative side of Ai. Still, caution and vigilance against machines that are replacing humans is warranted.
I don’t know why but it seems to be rather accurate at the school level. Perhaps because it’s so well covered as it is. It’s where there is less data available that it starts to hallucinations
This actually teaches children to learn to question and understand what they're hearing instead of just assuming the information is correct. Building cross validation skills is incredibly important. Something very important with all the misinformation out there.
Kids will ALWAYS be one step ahead of this! They have a knack for thinking outside of the box and finding way to skirt the system. If you ain’t cheating, you ain’t trying!!!🤷🏻♂️
Math teacher here - The use of ChatGPT and other online tools is killing student thinking. They look for the shortest way to complete a job. I have high schools students who, literally, cannot compute 2x8 without a calculator. AI is going to destroy critical thinking and problem solving in classrooms.
Mathematics skills comes with hand & pen practice and repeating right? how does it help their problem solving skill if they go fast to ai for answer without putting presurring their minds a little
It just makes students more separated from each other. What we really need to bring to schools is peer to peer teaching, when students use concepts they learn to teach their friends.
@@Merriwether-w8k students have very restricted amount of time during the lesson for the communication. Any minute they can communicate either with AI or with a human. I think humans are better.
@@Merriwether-w8k Because the AI is a crutch. It creates dependency and doesnt develop communication and group level skills, much less critical thinking skills because the assumption is that the "AI is always right" which it isnt. Its not necessarily bad, I just think it should only ever be supplementary.
Integrity is paramount. That’s the long game. If people trust that you have the best intentions……..they will most definitely put HUGE effort into understanding massive failure. Anywho …… Cooper always had the best shows ❤
Insightful; great to see traction here: #personalised learning ! Well done tie up @Chat GPT, @Khan Academy..showing us different learning potentials here…..😊
I don't think there is a privacy concern since they are only interacting with the ai about homework, school tasks etc. Teachers of courses online already have a lot of oversight on how students are interacting with the tools.
I retired from teaching about a year before AI was rolling out to the public. I wish I had access to this. The hours and hours I spent doing behind the scenes work (writing lesson plans, writing progress reports) could have been saved. I have envisioned lessons I could have done using AI to assist my students.
Since no right angles are indicated it doesn't assume a perpendicular bisector and associates the '2' as the side length of the side forming a triangle with the other sides with values. At least that's what I would argue if Sal hired me to get him out of this mess. 😂
For K-12, teachers will still be needed because, like it or not, one of the purposes of school is daycare. Getting an education is just a "plus" to that. Many elected officials don't truly want GREAT schools, they want minimally effective schools at the lowest possible cost, because they view education as a cost and not an infrastructure investment. So long as one of the main purposes of K-12 schools is to be a "storage facility" for kids so they aren't roaming the streets and neighborhoods, people will be needed. Will it always be teachers in the way we have them now? Who knows...
An amazing tool. Also, kids need the human attention of caring adults. So this is in no way a replacement for teachers or tutors. (It doesn't look like they're claiming it is)
Sal Khan always looking for innovative ways to close the gaps between what the teacher presents and what the student learns. Using AI looks like a very promising tool, and sounds like many of its drawbacks are being checked. Now we have AI helping teachers craft their lessons. I think it's going to improve teaching and learning, with the teacher/student relationship at the center of it all.
please wait a second , before moving @10.48, its may an intentional question, but AI is not completely wrong, because the length 4 asked is called as slant height, even though the actual height is 3, The slant height is still 4 and its still a height, the hypotenuse is called slant height,.. its a little bit tricy to AI for asking in different context,.. its like asking AI , can a green apple is called an apple or red apple is apple.....?
Considering that AI software such as ChatGPT comes with disclaimers including, (a) Its results may not be truthful and (b) you agree to not sue them, I think AI should be the starting point for research, and not the truth.
You're talking about two completely different things. ChatGPT is a general-purpose AI designed to handle a wide range of topics and conversations, whereas Kahnmigo is a specialized educational tool integrated into Khan Academy. Kahnmigo focuses on personalized learning, aligning closely with vetted educational content, while ChatGPT draws from a broader dataset and serves as a versatile tool for various tasks. Kahnmigo is tailored for accuracy within an educational framework, whereas ChatGPT is better suited as a starting point for exploration or brainstorming. That said, it’s important to recognize that not all AI should be dismissed as 'just a starting point' for research. Tools like Kahnmigo, built with domain-specific focus and vetted resources, are designed to offer reliable outputs in their specialized fields. While skepticism toward general-purpose AI like ChatGPT is valid, especially given its broader scope and potential for inaccuracies, domain-specific AI can often represent established truths. AI's role isn't simply to begin a process but to collaborate in uncovering reliable answers when used thoughtfully and with proper oversight.
@@courtneyb6154 Kahnmigo IS ChatGPT. There is no difference. Maybe try and understand how LLMs work? They're just giving it massive prompts to try and minimize hallucinations and erroneous answers, but since that is inherent in the training data and is just how LLMs work, it's unavoidable.
@ I’m talking about two AI programs. Are you saying Kaynmigo claims to always give truthful answers, and the company accepts liability if it’s not truthful?
What about the 30% of the time it teaches the student incorrect information (with confidence)? When they grow up and use that “knowledge” to make important decisions, what will happen to society? Don’t just trust the little snippets you see here; try it yourself in a topic you have personal expertise on and see what happens.
I use Gemini to help me with my math homework. I do the question, and if I'm stuck or I know I keep getting wrong. I take a picture of it and it will identify exactly what I'm doing wrong and tell me why and how I can do it correctly in the future.
This is so they don’t have to pay teachers to tutor kids after school… They would much rather pay an annual licensing fee to a corporation than pay teachers for their worth… They are not being subtle with their long term plans for education.
Dare to dream bigger friend. I see the future of education being personal AI instructors for every student with a human teacher there to assist when the AI struggles to teach a concept. Every student could learn at their own pace. This would also eliminate the need for testing since testing only exists due to the fact that we have many students to a single teacher, so that teacher can't know every persons understanding. With one-on-one instruction, this is not the case. Back in the old days, this was normal. If you wanted to be a blacksmith you wouldn't attend a class with a bunch of other hopefuls. You'd apprentice under a master who would focus on teaching you. The master would know your abilities because they would give you a task and see where you made mistakes and suggest improvements. This is the ultimate goal of education, to improve your ability, not to pass a test. Honestly, most kids (myself included when I attended school) learn how to beat the test rather than trying to learn the material. This largely goes away in an one-on-one student centric environment.
As a professor, I felt largely replaced by UA-cam. All the interested student really needed was an overview of the materia to get started. However, most students need tests and grades to stay motivated. When AI tests and grades, teachers will be in trouble. I used AI to prepare multiple choice/fill-in questions and it worked pretty well.
This is easy, I programmed and coded my AI to do the same. It’s not as difficult as you think it is. It’s still ChatGPT at the end of the day but it’s just the instructions you give it
60 Minutes has exercised very little skepticism about generative AI and asked nothing about following the money. For example, how much did Geoffrey Hinton stand to earn from generative AI with stock holdings and/or patents? They also refer to image classifiers as AI, and make no differentiation between text-generative AI and text-summarizer AI, a vagueness which plays into the hype. The khamigo's essay critique makes no room for breaking format from "connecting childhood events to later life" what does that mean to a sixth-grader? The many reviews of Khan's book shows much more healthy skepticism than the once-revered 60 Minutes. No journalism is happening here. This is an infomercial.
I imagine things may get tricky when trying to use this technology to teach potentially controversial topics, e.g. genocides throughout history, because the AI tutor needs to be accurate and informative but also not actively promote dangerous ideas close to the subject matter; this is probably the kind of teaching domain that would still be very human-led to allow that kind of careful nuance in teaching (for now)
Sal Kahn thought that is for education to be free and accessable to everyone, If were to be implemented by everyone; world difintelty would be somewhere else. Insofar they're still people who ban education.
AI is like a sports car. It just gets you where you want to go faster without rethinking what we’re teaching the students and why we’re teaching them those things we’re just paving the cow paths
Ever grateful for Khan Academy! I couldn't learn mathematics much at school and all the way to the college, I kept failing and passing with minimum scores, until I buckled down and learned it for my computer degree math exam and passed with high score! (it was free back in 2011 🥹 not sure about now)
I've done testing of AI like they did on the height of the triangle, and there are a lot of similar responses where it gets confused and gives the wrong answer. I have corrected it and it responds 'You are right, I apologize' and will then proceed to explain it another way that is also wrong. Still a ways to go.
I often feel jaded with AI since I work in tech, and there is much more sales than substance with regards to AI in this industry. Hopefully AI really is a boon rather than a detrament to students, I'd like to think Khan is a good person to trust.
Wonder HOW MUCH electrical power Conmigo requires..-and who will pay for said power; the users of Conmigo or those who own Conmigo?.. do tell-the actual power requirements!
Khan is one of the most influential persons in the school education in last 20 years!
I love the time-saving implications of this for teachers, but in concerns to the students I'm somewhat skeptical how well they will actually retain this information.
This is essentially a form of speed-learning, and studies have shown that the retention rate of speed-learning programs like this is incredibly short-term.
Sal Khan will be considered one of the most influential minds in Education in this 21st Century, just like Paulo Freiré or Maria Montessori were education revolutionaries of the past century.
Glad to hear its free for all teachers. Those are who need it first and the most
The school district have to pay $15 per student. That's not free , taxpayers money, taxes from teachers salary too.
@@SankalpaTutor $15 per student per year is a TINY amount of money compared to the amount of time and materials a product like this can save.
@@Muffinman9 Right, They are actually saving money and time.
@@elmogomez145 It got a simple, elementary math standard wrong. This will create more time to undo any mistakes.
@@SankalpaTutorThat sounds amazing and very cost effective. I totally support this as a tool
I find the best thing about AI is how it makes you think in a structured way
A list of juice world would be good
@rarephoenix agreed as an artist and an electrical engineering student. I'm very unique in that im a artist and a logical person at the same time. But rarely do the 2 sides of my brain combine into a logical creative idea but those ideas are typically the best just super rare. Being creative in my opinion involves just doing stuff with some thinking involved but not a lot. While logical stuff is more about thinking before doing so you ethier do before you think completely or think before you do completely.
OMG, how du can you be?
Yes being of all the same mindset of belonging is productive.
I had a Casio watch in the 4th grade with a calculator.👀🤦🏾♂️😂😂🤣
I thought my TI-80 calculator was amazing.
😂
@@kellymoses8566 Man, I was sweating when our calculus teacher said that we had to purchase a TI-82.🤔🤣🤣
@@rarephoenix Right. My AI was Encyclopedia Britannica 🤔🤣🗽
@@kellymoses8566still got mine.
What I have appreciated about computer tutors to teach students who may be a little slow, is that the computer NEVER loses patience, never sighs and says, "Do it again . . " etc. Students are never embarassed.
But will it open the pod bay doors. that's the real question
This is incredible. As a former teacher, I would have loved this additional resource. I utilized all of the tech available at the time (up through 2016). I also trained my 4th grade students to utilize both software and hardware in the classroom (Google products, Khan Academy, tablets, PC’s, Padlet student response system, etc). Thank you, Sal Khan and team, for all of your hard work. Students are benefitting tremendously from all that you are creating.
Wrong, the api is ChatGPT and it consistently is wrong and incorrect 😅😅😅
I agree. This is impressive and full of upsides. Google's search AI has _really_ been impressing me for months now.
But I have ask you and others, as educators, if you are concerned that this could ultimately replace educators completely?
@ Sadly, I have heard rumors that the ultimate goal of the leaders in education is to replace teachers with facilitators.
I like how it is very targeted to the student's individual capabilities. There is no way a teacher can do that with 30 kids in the room. But I do believe that teachers will still be needed to facilitate the learning process.
They did it thirty years ago.. .WTF.
Teachers won't be needed - he is getting rid of the Department of Education for a reason
Seeing these young students talk so positively about learning gives me great hope for their future. Sal Khan has done an incredible amount to democratize education across the world. His impact is hard to fathom.
This is the beginning of a revolution that will change the world. I feel like I'm watching the first railroad train 200 years ago. In a few years every kid will have the kind of private tutor that only the rich can afford now.
I worry that the rich will still own all the AIs, so they will decide what our kids are and aren't taught. Khan Academy on the face of it is a good organization but I can't honestly say who the CEO is, where he came from, what his goals and ambitions are in life etc. (edit: A year ago the CEO was doing a TED talk on how AI in education is the best thing ever. Today he's selling an AI to educators. Follow the money. This is not about the betterment of children, nor about educating the public on AI.)
But what about when Walmart AI comes out, and Starbucks AI, and now your kid at public school is being taught by the SamAI Sam's Club assistant, who teaches your child the importance of buying at big chain stores.
Well said.
@@Kvltklassikthat’s true but the open source community is already huge .
Once smaller models are made that can run on average hardware without the NEED for OpenAi servers or others processing the data it’ll be golden.
As of yet, OpenAI, Google, Meta, etc could cut the tap and we’d all be without our precious AI :P
YEAH and good ones will only be afforded by the rich... just like now!
this is nothing new... this is nothing revolutionary. this is just something shiney
Not quite. Private tutors are humans who can care about the kid, and give encouragement, talk about real life, and help boost the kid's social skills and confidence. I'm not knocking this tool at all! But it is not identical to a human.
This is just mind blowing. Being an ICT tutor, I see endless possibilities with this:planning, evaluation, thought process guide, feedback and research. 🎉
I’m in uni now and still find myself going back to khan academy not because my teacher cant teach me but because i am a student among 300 others they dont have time to teach every single one and i cant afford a tutor so stuff like this is fantastic
“In uni”? Who says “uni”??
Exactly. The technology is great…and it will be used to increase class sizes and make that lack of individualized human attention from a teacher worse.
I’ve noticed AI only gives you good if information if you ask the right questions
Very true. The output is only as good as the quality of input.
@ a concern is if AI gets the wrong information from the masses it’s learning incorrectly
Engineering good prompts is the best way to get the best results from AI
Prompt engineering is going to be part of curriculum in the near future
Even when you ask right questions, it can still hallucinate.
It's fascinating to see how the narrative surrounding Sal Khan has evolved over time. For years, the story was that he started as a humble UA-camr, creating educational videos to help his cousins with their studies. This grassroots origin story resonated deeply with people, embodying a relatable, selfless mission to make learning accessible. However, as Khan Academy grew and attracted major support, including grants from figures like Bill Gates, the focus of his introduction shifted. Now, much of the emphasis is on his prestigious academic background from MIT, lending additional credibility to his expertise. While both narratives are true, the change highlights how stories can be reframed to suit evolving audiences and objectives, but there's something truly remarkable about remembering the humble beginnings that made the whole journey possible.
great comment
Fascinating analysis
Very eloquently put.
6:03 Khanmigo is leading the way in exploring digital teaching skills with Ai technology (education will never be the same again, how awesome) 6:22 Wow 😮! This is very innovative! Getting direct feedback of the students performance in detail form is useful and innovative. This methodology is the future of teaching. 9:57 This Vision capability of Chatgpt is revolutionary (it's like sci-fi stuff) and very creative. Imagine parents using Chatgpt to monitor and gauge their children's overall progress in their education (at least for those who are concerned) at home after a school day.
My dad recently introduced me to Khan Academy, and I am learning to do coding, which is part of computer software development, which is what my dad did for a living
Brilliant. Great dad! Keep learning.
AI is taking over coding
I have learned more from Khan than any other online educational platform; he does God's work.
This is amazing!
I had a hard time learning the way schools teach and I use khan academy as an adult to relearn fundamental skills I never learned properly. If they open this up to parents of neurodivergent children, this can be a game changer. I needed help learning the material a different way and this would have been something that answered all my questions.
I love AI because it answers all my questions tirelessly without judgement. So, im learning how there's no such thing as a stupid question. In classroom one feels more cautious though i tried to push that, too because i love critical thinking and discovering connections between ideas.
When I was in the university for business course, I found Khan Academy and I still use it up to this days..
I'd been using AI to teach my junior/senior level undergraduate class this year 2024. The tool is good, but the user has to be better than the AI to check if its output. You'll always need to have an expert to check the output as Sal showed the triangle problem. Teacher will always be needed.
I can recognize that voice anywhere. Thank you Mr. Khan for helping through my accounting classes.
Just yesterday I recommended Khan Academy to a friend for his precocious grandsons.
This makes me reconsider.
Just out of curiosity, why do you say that?
It’s wild to be person that already knows these topics and see ai written content and see the amount of errors it makes
I wish I had this when I was in school. I always asked dumb questions during class, and the other students would laugh
The future of education seems to be shifting dramatically, and not always for the better. Instead of nurturing qualified teachers who inspire, guide, and engage students directly, we might find classrooms filled with facilitators merely managing AI-driven software. It's a sobering thought-trading the irreplaceable connection between a passionate teacher and their students for the cold efficiency of machines.
Imagine a world where classrooms are bursting at the seams, and the magic of individualized attention fades away. True engagement, the kind that sparks curiosity and fosters a lifelong love of learning, could be replaced by impersonal algorithms. What a loss it would be not to invest in smaller class sizes, where every student could be truly seen, heard, and challenged by a teacher who understands their unique potential. Teachers are more than deliverers of content; they are mentors, motivators, and role models. No AI can replicate that. This trajectory, if left unchallenged, could rob future generations of the transformative power of human connection in education.
As a teacher, I wholeheartedly agree! Instead of focusing on the real problem, which is to reduce class sizes and hire more teachers with a decent pay, we just seem to give up and say let the machines take over. It makes my life easier for now but soon I might be teaching a thousand students since each kid has a personal tutor and who needs a teacher anyways. This is of course the negative side of Ai. Still, caution and vigilance against machines that are replacing humans is warranted.
There will be no schools - every child will be homeschooled -
I want to see a confidence score in its answers. If a student doesn’t know what is wrong. How will they know what they’re learning is correct?
👍👍👍
LLMs only do confidence scores for a single next token. They don’t pick the highest scoring token because the response would be repetitive.
They won’t know, and lots of kids will be taught junk
I don’t know why but it seems to be rather accurate at the school level. Perhaps because it’s so well covered as it is. It’s where there is less data available that it starts to hallucinations
This actually teaches children to learn to question and understand what they're hearing instead of just assuming the information is correct. Building cross validation skills is incredibly important. Something very important with all the misinformation out there.
AI or no AI, Khan Academy is the single most useful app for students and teachers.
Khan Academy is outstanding!
The Khan Academy is a great resource. Please support them.
Kids will ALWAYS be one step ahead of this! They have a knack for thinking outside of the box and finding way to skirt the system. If you ain’t cheating, you ain’t trying!!!🤷🏻♂️
Math teacher here - The use of ChatGPT and other online tools is killing student thinking. They look for the shortest way to complete a job. I have high schools students who, literally, cannot compute 2x8 without a calculator. AI is going to destroy critical thinking and problem solving in classrooms.
Mathematics skills comes with hand & pen practice and repeating right? how does it help their problem solving skill if they go fast to ai for answer without putting presurring their minds a little
Fr, not even that hard either.
Step 1: google “ChatGPT”
This was an amazing ad 60 minutes! Great job!
Amazing, the use cases of AI is just mind blowing, this is how proper AI with guard rails and models that are trained well can help students
It just makes students more separated from each other. What we really need to bring to schools is peer to peer teaching, when students use concepts they learn to teach their friends.
Why?
@@Merriwether-w8k students have very restricted amount of time during the lesson for the communication. Any minute they can communicate either with AI or with a human. I think humans are better.
@@reshetovdenis They won't be able to tell the difference - either will you
@@Merriwether-w8k Because the AI is a crutch. It creates dependency and doesnt develop communication and group level skills, much less critical thinking skills because the assumption is that the "AI is always right" which it isnt. Its not necessarily bad, I just think it should only ever be supplementary.
They can both be implemented 🤷🏽♀️
Integrity is paramount.
That’s the long game.
If people trust that you have the best intentions……..they will most definitely put HUGE effort into understanding massive failure.
Anywho ……
Cooper always had the best shows ❤
Thank you for this inpspiring episode @AndersonCooper and Khanmigo ❤👏
Insightful; great to see traction here: #personalised learning ! Well done tie up @Chat GPT, @Khan Academy..showing us different learning potentials here…..😊
Sal Khan helped me get through college, refreshing me on math, physics, and science subject matter after summer learning losses
I was placed in the corner of the classroom facing the wall......
I actually think the AI won't try to do that. Wow!
Is there a privacy issue about tracking the students interaction with the ai? And can students opt out of the tracking part ?
I don't think there is a privacy concern since they are only interacting with the ai about homework, school tasks etc. Teachers of courses online already have a lot of oversight on how students are interacting with the tools.
This was an amazing ad 60 minutes!
Fricking love Khan Academy
Fr google ai explained certain steps better than my professor… will be revolutionary
I retired from teaching about a year before AI was rolling out to the public. I wish I had access to this. The hours and hours I spent doing behind the scenes work (writing lesson plans, writing progress reports) could have been saved. I have envisioned lessons I could have done using AI to assist my students.
There is a GREAT side of AI. That is how I will embrace it.
"How about the liver - give it a shot." 😂
This shot🥊 or that shot 🥃 ?
😂
great for teachers and kids
Khan Academy is well loved in the homeschool community 🥰
Khanmino also did not notice that it was an impossible triangle
Since no right angles are indicated it doesn't assume a perpendicular bisector and associates the '2' as the side length of the side forming a triangle with the other sides with values. At least that's what I would argue if Sal hired me to get him out of this mess. 😂
Amazing
First was khan academy now khanmigo😊
Interesting topic. Thanks for including the geometry error. As a former math 7 teacher, that sobered me up quickly.
The ability to see the footprints of their work is lights out
👍
For K-12, teachers will still be needed because, like it or not, one of the purposes of school is daycare. Getting an education is just a "plus" to that. Many elected officials don't truly want GREAT schools, they want minimally effective schools at the lowest possible cost, because they view education as a cost and not an infrastructure investment. So long as one of the main purposes of K-12 schools is to be a "storage facility" for kids so they aren't roaming the streets and neighborhoods, people will be needed. Will it always be teachers in the way we have them now? Who knows...
Glad what Sal is doing and kudos Khanmigo :-)
AWESOME!!!!
An amazing tool. Also, kids need the human attention of caring adults. So this is in no way a replacement for teachers or tutors. (It doesn't look like they're claiming it is)
"Conmigo" is Spanish for "With me"
Yes, they mentioned that at the start of the video.
Sal Khan always looking for innovative ways to close the gaps between what the teacher presents and what the student learns. Using AI looks like a very promising tool, and sounds like many of its drawbacks are being checked. Now we have AI helping teachers craft their lessons. I think it's going to improve teaching and learning, with the teacher/student relationship at the center of it all.
FINALLY, AI is a tool that teachers should teach students how to use. On the other hand, teachers will use this to assign too much work for students.
Some children are going to spend almost their entire childhood learning from these things and become the best educated humans in history.
I agree.
This might actually increase the collective IQ of humanity. All we would need is to completely get rid of social media or replace it with AI instead.
We don’t want the most educated humans, we want the most imaginative humans ever! Creativity got us this far!
please wait a second , before moving @10.48, its may an intentional question, but AI is not completely wrong, because the length 4 asked is called as slant height, even though the actual height is 3, The slant height is still 4 and its still a height, the hypotenuse is called slant height,.. its a little bit tricy to AI for asking in different context,.. its like asking AI , can a green apple is called an apple or red apple is apple.....?
Considering that AI software such as ChatGPT comes with disclaimers including, (a) Its results may not be truthful and (b) you agree to not sue them, I think AI should be the starting point for research, and not the truth.
You're talking about two completely different things. ChatGPT is a general-purpose AI designed to handle a wide range of topics and conversations, whereas Kahnmigo is a specialized educational tool integrated into Khan Academy. Kahnmigo focuses on personalized learning, aligning closely with vetted educational content, while ChatGPT draws from a broader dataset and serves as a versatile tool for various tasks. Kahnmigo is tailored for accuracy within an educational framework, whereas ChatGPT is better suited as a starting point for exploration or brainstorming.
That said, it’s important to recognize that not all AI should be dismissed as 'just a starting point' for research. Tools like Kahnmigo, built with domain-specific focus and vetted resources, are designed to offer reliable outputs in their specialized fields. While skepticism toward general-purpose AI like ChatGPT is valid, especially given its broader scope and potential for inaccuracies, domain-specific AI can often represent established truths. AI's role isn't simply to begin a process but to collaborate in uncovering reliable answers when used thoughtfully and with proper oversight.
@@courtneyb6154
Are you saying that Kahnmigo guarantees its output is truthful, and they will accept liability if its output is not truthful?
@@courtneyb6154 Kahnmigo IS ChatGPT. There is no difference. Maybe try and understand how LLMs work? They're just giving it massive prompts to try and minimize hallucinations and erroneous answers, but since that is inherent in the training data and is just how LLMs work, it's unavoidable.
@
I’m talking about two AI programs.
Are you saying Kaynmigo claims to always give truthful answers, and the company accepts liability if it’s not truthful?
@@courtneyb6154 I’m pretty sure Khanmigo is just a prompt wrapper for gpt-4o.
What about the 30% of the time it teaches the student incorrect information (with confidence)? When they grow up and use that “knowledge” to make important decisions, what will happen to society? Don’t just trust the little snippets you see here; try it yourself in a topic you have personal expertise on and see what happens.
Very appealing I’m fan of academy
Awesome, great usage.. open AI is revolutionary tech company.. there are literally hundreds of use cases and how it can shape our future.
I use Gemini to help me with my math homework. I do the question, and if I'm stuck or I know I keep getting wrong. I take a picture of it and it will identify exactly what I'm doing wrong and tell me why and how I can do it correctly in the future.
Absolutely incredible, the future is bright!!
This is so they don’t have to pay teachers to tutor kids after school… They would much rather pay an annual licensing fee to a corporation than pay teachers for their worth… They are not being subtle with their long term plans for education.
It looks promising and the geometric formulas must be explained by what they do with the formula and not just show the formula.
Dare to dream bigger friend. I see the future of education being personal AI instructors for every student with a human teacher there to assist when the AI struggles to teach a concept. Every student could learn at their own pace. This would also eliminate the need for testing since testing only exists due to the fact that we have many students to a single teacher, so that teacher can't know every persons understanding. With one-on-one instruction, this is not the case. Back in the old days, this was normal. If you wanted to be a blacksmith you wouldn't attend a class with a bunch of other hopefuls. You'd apprentice under a master who would focus on teaching you. The master would know your abilities because they would give you a task and see where you made mistakes and suggest improvements. This is the ultimate goal of education, to improve your ability, not to pass a test.
Honestly, most kids (myself included when I attended school) learn how to beat the test rather than trying to learn the material. This largely goes away in an one-on-one student centric environment.
Bring it.
Release the entire interview unedited with the CEO of Ripple
From birth to 18 a child could ask an LLM a million questions.
From birth to 18 a child will likely watch Pewdiepie and Tiktok.
@@swallowedinthesea11pewdiepie? This isn’t 2013 anymore bro.
@@DivinesLegacy😂😂😂
I can't wait to use my slide rule again.
I'd love to know more about their content moderation approach! Super important with children and young people using the internet.
As a professor, I felt largely replaced by UA-cam. All the interested student really needed was an overview of the materia to get started. However, most students need tests and grades to stay motivated. When AI tests and grades, teachers will be in trouble. I used AI to prepare multiple choice/fill-in questions and it worked pretty well.
This will be good for parents who home school their kids
This is easy, I programmed and coded my AI to do the same. It’s not as difficult as you think it is. It’s still
ChatGPT at the end of the day but it’s just the instructions you give it
I hope this is available outside of the USA somehow.
I would love to see how this turns out in 10 years
60 Minutes has exercised very little skepticism about generative AI and asked nothing about following the money. For example, how much did Geoffrey Hinton stand to earn from generative AI with stock holdings and/or patents? They also refer to image classifiers as AI, and make no differentiation between text-generative AI and text-summarizer AI, a vagueness which plays into the hype. The khamigo's essay critique makes no room for breaking format from "connecting childhood events to later life" what does that mean to a sixth-grader? The many reviews of Khan's book shows much more healthy skepticism than the once-revered 60 Minutes. No journalism is happening here. This is an infomercial.
I imagine things may get tricky when trying to use this technology to teach potentially controversial topics, e.g. genocides throughout history, because the AI tutor needs to be accurate and informative but also not actively promote dangerous ideas close to the subject matter; this is probably the kind of teaching domain that would still be very human-led to allow that kind of careful nuance in teaching (for now)
It needs a feature that shows parents how to help their kid on the subjects
Sal Kahn thought that is for education to be free and accessable to everyone, If were to be implemented by everyone; world difintelty would be somewhere else.
Insofar they're still people who ban education.
AI is like a sports car. It just gets you where you want to go faster without rethinking what we’re teaching the students and why we’re teaching them those things we’re just paving the cow paths
Ai levels the playing field; equalizes skillsets and provides opportunities to everyone
i downloaded this video it's worth of it
Hallucination on identifying the height of a triangle??? How well do Khan's models work on more advanced topics?
Nice where can I get this
That’s actually pretty great
This is awesome
Ever grateful for Khan Academy! I couldn't learn mathematics much at school and all the way to the college, I kept failing and passing with minimum scores, until I buckled down and learned it for my computer degree math exam and passed with high score! (it was free back in 2011 🥹 not sure about now)
Still free!!
AI has amazing possibilities. But when does it turn into Black Mirror, Dune, or any other number of dystopian futures?
Would Khanmigo be available for home schooling?
Technology is turning everything into a self-service business. First, self-checkouts and now self-teaching.
I've done testing of AI like they did on the height of the triangle, and there are a lot of similar responses where it gets confused and gives the wrong answer. I have corrected it and it responds 'You are right, I apologize' and will then proceed to explain it another way that is also wrong.
Still a ways to go.
Mr. Cooper is looking dapper!
I often feel jaded with AI since I work in tech, and there is much more sales than substance with regards to AI in this industry. Hopefully AI really is a boon rather than a detrament to students, I'd like to think Khan is a good person to trust.
Wonder HOW MUCH electrical power Conmigo requires..-and who will pay for said power; the users of Conmigo or those who own Conmigo?.. do tell-the actual power requirements!
He said it with a straight face. lol Teachers will be some of the first jobs to go.
This is all good. 👍
Anthropic Claude Sonnet 3.5 is very good at generating Python code.