Robot: Write Me an Article on Teaching with Google Slides
I love me some disruptive technology. There’s no point in beating our chest about how technology x has made y obsolete. The business world can not ignore disruptive technology or they will go out of business. As educators we are in the business of preparing students for THEIR future. The future for students includes AI (Artificial Intelligence). It includes looking things up on Google and YouTube. Photomath is not cheating, this is simply forcing a new way to approach math. The new thing to freak-out about in education is ChatGPT. Ask it to write you pretty much anything. An essay, code, a recipe… anything you want!
Try Out ChatGPT
I Asked ChatGPT to Write This Article
I love to blog, but can ChatGPT replace me? I asked ChatGPT:
Write an Article on Teaching with Google Slides
Teaching with Google Slides is a popular and effective way for educators to engage and inspire their students. With this versatile tool, teachers can create interactive and multimedia-rich presentations that can be easily shared and accessed by students on any device with an internet connection.
One of the key benefits of using Google Slides for teaching is its collaboration features. Teachers can share a presentation with their students and allow them to add their own comments, suggestions, and even edit the slides in real-time. This allows for a more interactive and engaging learning experience, as students can actively participate in the creation of the presentation.
In addition to collaboration, Google Slides also offers a wide range of tools and features that can enhance a presentation. Teachers can add images, videos, and other multimedia elements to make the presentation more engaging and interactive. They can also use the drawing and diagramming tools to create diagrams, mind maps, and other visual aids to help students understand complex concepts.
Another advantage of using Google Slides for teaching is that it is easy to integrate with other Google tools and applications. For example, teachers can use Google Forms to create surveys and quizzes that can be embedded directly into the presentation. This allows for real-time assessment and feedback, which can be used to adjust the presentation and tailor it to the needs of the students.
Overall, teaching with Google Slides is a powerful and effective way for educators to engage and inspire their students. By using the collaboration and multimedia features of this tool, teachers can create interactive and dynamic presentations that can help students learn and retain information more effectively.
-ChatGPT
Try Again – Same Question
Google Slides is a powerful tool for teachers to create engaging and interactive presentations. With its user-friendly interface, teachers can easily create and edit slides, add multimedia, and collaborate with colleagues and students.
One of the key benefits of using Google Slides for teaching is the ability to collaborate in real-time. Teachers can share their slides with students and allow them to add their own content, making the learning experience more interactive and engaging. This also allows teachers to see how their students are progressing in real-time and provide feedback and guidance.
Google Slides also allows teachers to incorporate multimedia into their presentations, such as videos, images, and audio files. This can help to make the content more engaging and interactive for students. For example, a teacher can add a video to a slide to show a real-world example of a concept being discussed.
Another benefit of using Google Slides for teaching is the ability to access and edit slides from any device. This means that teachers and students can access and edit their slides from their smartphones, tablets, or laptops, making it easy to collaborate and work on projects from anywhere.
Google Slides also has a wealth of features and tools that can help teachers create professional-looking presentations. For example, teachers can use the built-in templates and themes to quickly create a visually appealing presentation. They can also use the various formatting options, such as font styles and colors, to make their slides stand out.
In conclusion, Google Slides is a valuable tool for teachers to create engaging and interactive presentations. With its ability to collaborate in real-time, incorporate multimedia, and access from any device, Google Slides can help teachers to create engaging and effective learning experiences for their students.
ChatGPT
Analyze over Memorize
ChatGPT slapped a bunch of facts together in what is a pretty basic article. It lacks details and examples that would actually be helpful. If you were looking for how to teach with Google Slides would this article transform your teaching?
The essay has not died. Education is not over.
I use Duolingo to learn Spanish. Does this mean Spanish teachers are obsolete? YES if the only thing a teacher does is asks kids to memorize verb conjugations. There are 5 million different math websites/applications that will tell students how to solve the quadratic formula and let them practice the skill. Does this mean that math teachers are obsolete? YES YES YES if that is all math teachers are expecting of their students… to crank out an answer.
ChatGPT is My New Sidekick
I code. I asked ChatGPT to write me Google Apps Script for creating Google Slides. This literally is one line of code
function makeSlides()SlidesApp.create(‘Google Slides’);
-coded by Alice Keeler
However, ChatGPT took it further.
I copied and pasted the output from ChatGPT and it had an error.
Cool. Now I can use critical thinking to ANALYZE THE MISTAKE.
I looked in my Google Drive. It DID create a Google Slides presentation. Now… to FIGURE OUT why it didn’t add a slide.
I am STRUGGLING to figure out the mistake. Even though I let ChatGPT get me started… it is challenging to adapt and modify it. While I am analyzing what is wrong with the code I am learning some new things, so win! For whatever I am doing I think I will keep ChatGPT open in another tab and let it help me GET STARTED!
Vygotsky’s Zone of Proximal Development
You can only get yourself so far and then you need someone to help you go further. I’ve long said this is the role of the teacher. Not primarily for teaching students what they can do for themselves, but taking what they were able to do and taking it further.
Submit Your Draft
How can we help students GO FURTHER? Maybe they start with ChatGPT. Then analyze and modify the output. Now, how can we give them actionable feedback to go even further in creativity and critical thinking?
Let Robots be Robots
We do not need children to compete with calculators.
We do not need students to compete with ChatGPT.
We do not need to grade low critical thinking tasks. If a robot can deliver the content. If a robot can grade it. THE ROBOT SHOULD ABSOLUTELY DO THAT! Free up your time as a teacher to help students be more creative. Free up your time to do the time consuming work of teaching students to be a critical thinker.
Now more than ever, false and intentionally misleading information is all over the internet. If we choose to do anything in our schools I hope that MEDIA LITERACY is our top priority. Students critically analyzing what robots, and nefarious characters, have put on social media, in blog posts, YouTube videos, and in news articles.
I Tweeted That ChatGPT was Making My Blog Post Today
Check out my Tweet but more importantly the REPLIES! Especially Donnie Piercey (see below) he’s a hoot!
I am letting ChatGPT write my blog post today.
Try it: https://t.co/Uwl5ZXXFWK pic.twitter.com/UatkozVX58— Alice Keeler (@alicekeeler) December 10, 2022
Donnie Piercey Tweets Back
— donnie piercey (@mrpiercEy) December 10, 2022
— donnie piercey (@mrpiercEy) December 10, 2022
— donnie piercey (@mrpiercEy) December 10, 2022
— donnie piercey (@mrpiercEy) December 10, 2022
— donnie piercey (@mrpiercEy) December 10, 2022
— donnie piercey (@mrpiercEy) December 10, 2022
Now I asked it to turn your post into a rap battle between Eminem and Ringo Starr where Eminem likes Google slides and Ringo Starr does not. pic.twitter.com/u1f6sLCkxV
— donnie piercey (@mrpiercEy) December 10, 2022
Now I asked it to turn your piece into a sea shanty pic.twitter.com/dDFoiRQzAB
— donnie piercey (@mrpiercEy) December 10, 2022
I asked it to rewrite your article with a velociraptor, Marty mcfly, and a warm piece of buttered toast. pic.twitter.com/PqSrGYFD5l
— donnie piercey (@mrpiercEy) December 10, 2022
Some Educators Sharing What They Asked ChatGPT to Do
What I have learned by seeing what other educators are asking ChatGPT to answer is … they are way more creative than me!! ha!
my job as a teacher isn’t to sit around and try to catch my students cheating though. i feel like at this point in the year i’d be able to tell if a kid turned in something that was blatantly written by AI. 100% though – this is an issue that will need to be addressed quickly.
— donnie piercey (@mrpiercEy) December 10, 2022
— donnie piercey (@mrpiercEy) December 10, 2022
and yes… organizations and companies that hand out digital badges, certifications, and awards: this also means that educators can just use AI bots like ChatGPT to answer all those questions on your applications. Again, this is a pretty canned response, but still… oh man. pic.twitter.com/wy8RdqrWeu
— donnie piercey (@mrpiercEy) December 10, 2022
AI can now read those generic paragraphs and open response questions we assign students and then answer the questions instantly. Yes, this means that they can just copy and paste anything we send to them and have a computer answer it. No, blocking the site won’t help. pic.twitter.com/USCebB6NW0
— donnie piercey (@mrpiercEy) December 8, 2022
i also think it’s quite cool. lol. ask it to “write the ending of (insert movie title here) but add ______________’ pic.twitter.com/w7NrZZFXr4
— donnie piercey (@mrpiercEy) December 10, 2022
Lol, for what it’s worth pic.twitter.com/89l6d4jBhj
— donnie piercey (@mrpiercEy) December 10, 2022
An AI wrote this but I want full credit #ChatGPT @PostMalone @Garfield pic.twitter.com/Bsgm9P8LQn
— Danny Leeming (@dleeming2) December 10, 2022
I just tried that ChatGPT on topics I was familiar with and … I’d laugh harder if I wasn’t shocked at the accuracy in subject matter …
— @TheJoseVilson everywhere (@TheJoseVilson) December 10, 2022
If teachers only know surface-level writing… then they’ll be easily fooled. But, anyone who has a clue about critical thinking just sees this as topshelf Google.
— Patrick, Not Pat Is Trying to Graduate (@PresidentPat) December 10, 2022
IMO: Open- ai might be the most disruptive technology in education to come out in the last 10 years – I mentioned it to my daughter she said everyone is sharing how to use it on TikTok
— Tanya Avrith ❤️ #AdobeEduCreative (@TanyaAvrith) December 10, 2022
We WILL figure out how to adapt to the impact of AI (ChatGPT et al) on writing instruction and literary analysis.
Teachers made the sudden paradigm shift to online learning. The current “freak out” is over the impact on learning/instruction while we adjust and redesign.#ChatGPT— Pamela Bradley (@4pambradley) December 10, 2022
My husband is an English teacher and here is what he asked ChatGPT