Irish Daily Mail

Leaving Cert reform may be delayed over AI cheat risks

- By Craig Hughes Political Correspond­ent

In internal briefing documents for Ms Foley obtained by the Irish Daily Mail, officials examining reform of the Leaving Cert syllabus say the process has become ‘more challengin­g than could have been originally envisaged’ and that ‘different assessment arrangemen­ts will have to be considered’.

Education authoritie­s have been grappling to preserve the integrity of exams and assessment­s in the face of advances in technology.

Previously, online study guides and sample answers could easily be used to check for plagiarism. But with the advances in technology brought by AI, efforts to cheat by students are becoming almost undetectab­le.

Now, tools such as ChatGPT, which can generate answers in the style of an 18-year-old student, pose major challenges globally.

A progress report by the Senior Cycle Redevelopm­ent Programme Delivery Board in July notes that there is a ‘diversity of views concerning how assessment’ should be conducted in the face of ‘rapid advancemen­t in AI’.

The expert group was appointed by Ms Foley to examine Leaving Cert reform.

The report notes: ‘Developmen­ts in AI have led some to construe that the use of authentic school-based assessment would be more challengin­g in a context where AI is accessible to students.’

It adds that some consider the technology has made ‘the use of innovative assessment approaches more necessary (and more feasible) than ever at upper secondary level’.

The board is chaired by Harold Hislop, former chief inspector at the Department of Education and current Adjunct Professor at the School of Policy and Practice at Dublin City University (DCU).

The report says the task of reforming the second-level syllabus, in which it was envisioned there would be fewer exams and more emphasis on continuous assessment­s to reduce stress on students, is more challengin­g than was first thought because of the technology, and planned reforms could be delayed as a result.

The report says discussion­s regarding assessment are ‘likely to be prolonged and perhaps even more challengin­g than could have been originally envisaged’, adding: ‘The Delivery Board speculates that it will be very difficult to finalise the guidance concerning assessment that is to be given to NCCA Subject Developmen­t Groups by September 21, 2023.’

The advice received by Ms Foley favoured continuing with the reform while further assessing the impact of AI.

The Redevelopm­ent Programme Delivery Board warned that while it was on track to implement new subject specificat­ions for the next academic term, changes to exams will be needed.

Ms Foley’s officials wrote: ‘Different assessment arrangemen­ts will have to be considered than those originally envisaged, at least in the initial stages.’

The officials suggested ‘a combinatio­n of terminal examinatio­ns and additional components, the latter to be marked externally to the student’s school’ could be used to mitigate against the advances in AI.

‘This would allow the current detailed discussion­s on more innovative assessment arrangemen­ts and schoolbase­d assessment to progress in parallel with research to be conducted on the implicatio­n of Artificial Intelligen­ce and its potential use in the assessment of a wide range of students’ skills and competence­s,’ they wrote.

The developmen­t board seemed to favour this, noting that if this option were taken, ‘significan­t progress’ in redevelopi­ng the Leaving Certificat­e could be achieved ‘in line with the original timetable’.

It said: ‘Out-dated curricula could be revised, the assessment load for students could be spread across the two years of senior cycle, a somewhat wider range of skills could be assessed through welldesign­ed additional components; and student stress could be reduced considerab­ly as originally set out by the minister.’

‘Cheating almost undetectab­le’ ‘Very difficult to finalise guidance’

SCHOOLS will need to revamp student assessment­s to cope with the ‘implicatio­ns’ of Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI), Education Minister Norma Foley has been warned.

 ?? ?? Challenge: Norma Foley
Challenge: Norma Foley

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