- The Ministry of Education said AI poses significant challenges for schools.
- AI use is governed by each school鈥檚 board, with 60% of young people using it for schoolwork.
- Associate Professor Kathryn MacCallum emphasises the need for AI literacy and clearer guidance from the Ministry and NZQA.
There are calls for clearer AI policies in schools - but the Ministry of Education says its guidance is consistent.
is currently governed by each school鈥檚 board, while the Ministry encourages schools to develop a policy.
Curriculum Centre Acting Leader, Pauline Cleaver said AI is a in schools right now.
鈥淲e know that [it] poses that cannot be ignored.鈥
鈥淭hese include algorithmic bias, which risks reinforcing existing inequities if AI systems are not intentionally designed to be inclusive; privacy issues related to the collection and use of student data and raises critical issues about the ownership.鈥
In a self-reported survey, 60% of young people reported using generative AI to assist them with schoolwork.
The Ministry does not have requirements to use
Cleaver said guidance has been provided to schools - and it鈥檚 consistent.
鈥淭he role of AI in education must be to and provide assistance to knowledgeable and skilled teachers,鈥 she said.
Use of the technology is governed by each school鈥檚 board.
But Canterbury University Associate Professor of Digital Education, Kathryn MacCallum said some schools are adopting it more than others.
鈥淚 think the biggest issue is that probably there鈥檚 not a lot of clarity from the Ministry and around how we need to engage in this, and some of that is probably a big barrier in terms of using it to its full potential.鈥
MacCallum said there needs to be a bigger focus on , particularly for teachers.
鈥淚f we do not train all teachers and students on how to use AI, we risk further exclusion,鈥 she said.
鈥淚f we don鈥檛 build our understanding of AI across all stakeholders, we will be unable to leverage it fully.鈥
She believes AI literacy should be something that sits across , as it impacts all aspects of learning.
has also admitted the Ministry 鈥渁ren鈥檛 giving great guidance and advice鈥.
鈥淚 feel a bit better when I have been overseas talking to my counterparts in other countries that we like to compare ourselves to, [as] they鈥檙e also struggling.鈥
鈥淲别鈥檙别 not alone in this.鈥
Education Minister Erica Stanford said AI's a tool which can improve learning outcomes for students, if used right. New Zealand Herald photograph by Mark Mitchell
Stanford said the Ministry is 鈥渄ipping a toe in the water鈥 in this space.
鈥淣ZQA are looking or they have been , and it鈥檚 been really successful.鈥
NZQA Deputy Chief Executive of Assessment, Jann Marshall said the technology can speed up time consuming processes and enabling new assessment opportunities.
鈥淔or example, starting with May 2025 assessments for Literacy, Te Reo Matatini, Numeracy and TeP膩ngarau, Automated Text Scoring will be used on all digitally submitted Literacy - Writing assessments,鈥 she said.
鈥淯sing Automated Text Scoring allows us to significantly reduce the time it will take to mark Writing assessments, reducing the workload on markers who are and enabling marking to be conducted outside of school holidays.鈥
Marshall said a large-scale trial has given them confidence in the accuracy of the tool, but for quality assurance, NZQA is also using a human check-marking process.
MacCallum said NZQA hasn鈥檛 quite captured the implications of generative AI on assessments - and students using it.
鈥淭he approach tends to be fairly risk-adverse鈥 she said.
鈥淔or example, NZQA have talked about, you can鈥檛 use AI in and it鈥檚 becoming very hard to control.鈥
鈥淎nd so I think we need to expand our conception of how AI can be used - its benefits as well as its drawbacks and how we actually use it for learning.鈥
previously committed to have a framework, to provide guidance, similar to what has.
Stanford said work has started, but not as quickly as she would鈥檝e liked.
鈥淏ut if I鈥檓 honest, I鈥檝e got the Ministry up to their eyeballs.鈥
鈥淲别鈥檙别 area right up to Year 13 because it doesn鈥檛 exist at the moment. We鈥檙e fundamentally, to make sure that it鈥檚 fit for purpose, we鈥檙e bringing in new assessment tools.鈥
鈥淚鈥榤 not trying to make excuses, but you can tell there鈥檚 only so many things I can load onto the Ministry.鈥
Jaime Cunningham is a Christchurch-based reporter with a focus on education, social issues and general news. She joined Newstalk ob体育接口 in 2023 after working as a sports reporter at the Christchurch Star.
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