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Future Fluent
Jeremy Roschelle and Betsy Corcoran
14 episodes
5 months ago

What changes for us, as writers, as creators, as thinkers – as humans – when there are more AI bots in the world than people? 


Telling stories about our lives and the world around us is one of the most intimate and powerful practices that we, as humans, have. And even though artificial intelligence has existed in some form for decades, only with the emergence of chatbots has AI become a storytelling machine. 


So what does AI mean for human literacy? What changes when algorithmic intelligence tells stories about ourselves and our world? Should we let it? And really, who is telling the story–and why? 


Join Dr. Jeremy Roschelle, the lead learning scientist at Digital Promise, and Betsy Corcoran, a journalist and founder of EdSurge, as they explore with writers, researchers, teachers and even policy makers the potential – both positive and negative – for AI, for literacy, and for us. 


Please join the conversation here on our LinkedIn page.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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All content for Future Fluent is the property of Jeremy Roschelle and Betsy Corcoran and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.

What changes for us, as writers, as creators, as thinkers – as humans – when there are more AI bots in the world than people? 


Telling stories about our lives and the world around us is one of the most intimate and powerful practices that we, as humans, have. And even though artificial intelligence has existed in some form for decades, only with the emergence of chatbots has AI become a storytelling machine. 


So what does AI mean for human literacy? What changes when algorithmic intelligence tells stories about ourselves and our world? Should we let it? And really, who is telling the story–and why? 


Join Dr. Jeremy Roschelle, the lead learning scientist at Digital Promise, and Betsy Corcoran, a journalist and founder of EdSurge, as they explore with writers, researchers, teachers and even policy makers the potential – both positive and negative – for AI, for literacy, and for us. 


Please join the conversation here on our LinkedIn page.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Show more...
Education
Technology,
Society & Culture
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How AI Bots Are Changing the Way We Write
Future Fluent
29 minutes 33 seconds
9 months ago
How AI Bots Are Changing the Way We Write
Great writers plunge themselves and their lived experience into their writing. In this episode of Future Fluent, Jeremy Roschelle and Betsy Corcoran talk with Mike Sharples, a renowned learning scientist. In the 1990s, Sharples predicted that in less than 20 years computers would write full novels. We talk about how AI has progressed as a writer—and how it may evolve in the future.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Future Fluent

What changes for us, as writers, as creators, as thinkers – as humans – when there are more AI bots in the world than people? 


Telling stories about our lives and the world around us is one of the most intimate and powerful practices that we, as humans, have. And even though artificial intelligence has existed in some form for decades, only with the emergence of chatbots has AI become a storytelling machine. 


So what does AI mean for human literacy? What changes when algorithmic intelligence tells stories about ourselves and our world? Should we let it? And really, who is telling the story–and why? 


Join Dr. Jeremy Roschelle, the lead learning scientist at Digital Promise, and Betsy Corcoran, a journalist and founder of EdSurge, as they explore with writers, researchers, teachers and even policy makers the potential – both positive and negative – for AI, for literacy, and for us. 


Please join the conversation here on our LinkedIn page.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.