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Flynn Zook's avatar

I am the student from CU Denver that you referenced in this article and I just want to say thank you for compiling this!! It's a really useful breakdown for us to keep in mind going forward with our fight :)

Sean Legnini's avatar

Hadn't heard the "cognitive surrender" idea before, at least in relation to "cognitive offloading." It's doing some real work that "offloading" can't. Offloading sounds so neutral... as in it just described where the work went without actually labeling something as lost. "Surrender" does a nice job of being clear about it - the student is handing over the act of judgement and reason. That sounds more harmful and probably not something easily seen in any kind of assessment activity.

What's interesting about it, too, is that the surrender seems to happen before the prompt is even typed. It's a "why bother thinking?" moment. And that kind of resonates with the whole "AI is inevitable" movement (which, I don't know - I partly buy into). Schools are relinquishing their judgement about the act of learning because the tech has arrived with enough confidence to make scrutiny feel useless.

Also, the AlphaSchool hype is crazy to me, especially when three minutes on google reveals the insanity.

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