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AI may disrupt math and computer science classes. Is there an upside?

For as long as Jake Price has been a teacher, Wolfram Alpha – a website that solves algebraic problems online – has threatened to make algebra homework obsolete. 

Teachers learned to work around and with it, says Dr. Price, assistant professor of mathematics and computer science at the University of Puget Sound. But now, they have a new homework helper to contend with: generative artificial intelligence tools, such as ChatGPT.

Professor Price doesn’t see ChatGPT as a threat, and he’s not alone. Some math professors believe AI, when used correctly, could help strengthen math instruction. And it’s arriving on the scene at a time when math scores are at a national historic low and educators are questioning if math should be taught differently. 

Why We Wrote This

As schools across the country debate banning AI tools, some math and computer science teachers are embracing the change because of the nature of their discipline. This story is part of The Math Problem, the latest project from the newsrooms of the Education Reporting Collaborative.

AI can serve as a tutor, giving a student who is floundering with a problem immediate feedback. It can help a teacher plan math lessons, or write a variety of math problems geared toward different levels of instruction. It can even show new computer programmers sample code, allowing them to skip over the boring chore of learning how to write basic code. 

As schools across the country debate banning AI tools, some math and computer science teachers are embracing the change because of the nature of their discipline.

“Math has always been evolving as technology evolves,” says Dr. Price. A hundred years ago, people were using slide rules and doing all of their multiplication with logarithmic tables. Then, along came calculators.

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