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Leslie Loble AM | Closing Australia’s Learning Divide

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    • arrow_forward Leslie Loble AM | Closing Australia’s Learning Divide

Empowering Impact: The Ethical Use of AI in Education 

With breakthrough developments in artificial intelligence becoming the eminent topic on the world stage, Leslie Loble's Paul Ramsay Foundation Fellowship research into the emergence of AI-enabled education technology, known as edtech, couldn’t have come at a more pertinent time.  

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[Music]

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imagine an artificial intelligence

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enhanced adaptive interactive computer

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software program that can identify when

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and how a student is having challenges

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with reading or maths now imagine that

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same computer program alerting that

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student's teacher and providing learning

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suggestions specifically designed for

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that student's

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difficulties or imagine an AI based app

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installed on any commercially available

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tablet that can precisely detect graphia

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writing difficulties in children then

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immediately start to address the child's

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writing challenges through engaging

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lessons exercises and games providing

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vital early stage support regardless of

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where that child lives or long waiting

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lists to see a diagnostic specialist

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these tools Don't Have To Be Imagined

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because they are already in use along

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with many other forms of AI enabled

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education technology or what we call

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edtech edtech today is offering unparal

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levels of personalization and enrichment

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to the way the children are taught an

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enormous potential to cut through the

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time- wasting administrative tasks that

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take teachers away from direct student

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engagement its influence on future

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Generations is inevitable edtech will

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become part of our educational furniture

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and perhaps quite soon certainly the

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edtech market is growing rapidly however

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my research conducted through a Paul

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Ramsey Foundation fellowship at the UTS

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Center for social justice and inclusion

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has found that not all edtech is created

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equal we must make sure that AI back

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dead Tech is high quality and fit for

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purpose designed based on learning

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science and built with all the safety

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protections that AI tools require

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privacy security transparency and

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absence of bias the proper use of edtech

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is the responsible use of edtech and

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that means safeguards for our children

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in schools the greatest Safeguard we

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have when using artificial intelligence

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is human intelligence putting systems in

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place to empower our teachers to be the

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governors of

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edtech the power of edtech is Amplified

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when it supports not replaces teachers

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research shows that edtech is most

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effective when designed with teachers

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and when its use is proportionate

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clearly targeted and well integrated

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into a teachers's learning

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plan it's crucial that we prepare our

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Educators to identify beneficial forms

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of edtech and to shape which kinds of

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edtech are adopted in

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schools it's also crucial that all

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students can access the power of edtech

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and not only those who already have

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educational advantages we cannot afford

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to let a digital divide compound our

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learning

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divide that's why through our UTS

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research

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we have established the Australian

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Network for Quality digital education we

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can help tackle Australia's learning

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divide through a clear strategic agenda

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for developing high quality ethical

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education technology that is accessible

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affordable and well supported for

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Effective implementation and impact this

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network will include Australian leaders

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across education industry Community

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philanthropy government and research

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sectors everyone who will be affected by

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the emergence of edtech must have the

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opportunity and voice in its development

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and

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use because with the right design

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training and oversight edtech not only

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has the power to enhance learning it

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also can be the Catalyst to disrupt

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education disadvantage Equity is a

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critical dimension of edtech and Central

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to our ambition for Quality digital

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education having equal access to

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Advanced learning tools that are

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inclusive by Design is the next Frontier

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in overcoming Australia's digital and

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learning divide between advantaged and

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disadvantaged

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students with the support of the Paul

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Ramsey foundation and the University of

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Technology Sydney we are building a

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network of Partners who are investing in

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the Equitable future of all Australian

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students join us in building an edtech

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future that is well-designed well used

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and well

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governed

Amid the widening gap between Australia’s most and least advantaged learners, Leslie Loble AM, as an Industry Professor at UTS Centre for Social Justice and Inclusion, published her call-to-action report, “Shaping AI and edtech to tackle Australia’s learning divide,” which outlined how high-quality edtech can, in the right environment, be used to improve outcomes for disadvantaged students when it is well-designed, well-used, and well-governed. 

Selected Links

Shaping AI and edtech to tackle Australia’s learning divide 

The rise of ChatGPT shows why we need a clearer approach to technology in schools 

Persistent Impact: The Australian Network for Quality Digital Education 

A crucial factor surrounding AI-enabled education technology is the imperative that we bring every possible resource to overcoming the digital and learning divides in Australia, so long as they are effective, ethical and educationally sound. This imperative became the driving force empowering the establishment of the Australian Network for Quality Digital Education and the continued partnership with the Paul Ramsay Foundation.  

The Network assembles voices across all sectors in Australia - government, industry, philanthropy - with the aim to improve education equity through the effective and ethical implementation of the rapidly evolving technological advances in the education space.  

The Network fosters a common purpose and drives collective action for research and advocacy to strengthen the social benefit of edtech and to redefine the edtech landscape as an important step towards bridging the educational divide.  

The Australian Network for Quality Digital Education is helping to shape innovation, pedagogy, protections, and policy for AI-based edtech to deliver better outcomes for all students, especially our most vulnerable.  

Selected Links

Harnessing edtech’s potential to improve learning outcomes, for students who need it most. 

Australia needs quality assurance to harness benefits of AI and edtech for students and schools

Partnerships are critical to our programs. Contact the team to find out more:

Lady with shoulder length curly hair and wearing glasses smiling and looking at the camera

Leslie Loble AM

Industry Professor – Paul Ramsay Fellowship
Centre for Social Justice and Inclusion
Lady with short hair smiling and looking at the camera

Sarah Angus

Senior Advancement Manager, Trust And Foundation Philanthropy 
UTS Advancement

This project is proudly supported by the Paul Ramsay Foundation.

Paul Ramsay Foundation Logo

Acknowledgement of Country

UTS acknowledges the Gadigal People of the Eora Nation and the Boorooberongal People of the Dharug Nation upon whose ancestral lands our campuses now stand. We would also like to pay respect to the Elders both past and present, acknowledging them as the traditional custodians of knowledge for these lands. 

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