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Datametrex AI Ltd V.DM

Alternate Symbol(s):  DTMXF

Datametrex AI Limited is a technology-focused company with exposure to artificial intelligence, healthcare, and mobile gaming. It is focused on collecting, analyzing and presenting structured and unstructured data using machine learning and artificial intelligence. The Company's products include AnalyticsGPT, Cyber Security, and Healthcare. AnalyticsGPT platform scans vast data streams from social media, news, blogs, forums, messengers, enterprise data, and the dark Web, creating predictive analytics. Cyber Security is a deep analytics platform that captures, structures, and visualizes vast amounts of unstructured social media data, which is used as a discovery tool that allows organizations to make decisions. It offers Nexa Products, which consists of NexaSecurity and NexaSMART. Healthcare consists of Imagine Health Centres, a multidisciplinary healthcare facility, and Medi-Call, a telehealth platform. The Company also offers a mobile blockchain game, Cereal Crunch.


TSXV:DM - Post by User

Post by EnoughBullon Mar 05, 2023 11:01pm
192 Views
Post# 35320524

ChatGPT in the Canadian classrooms

ChatGPT in the Canadian classroomshttps://globalnews.ca/news/9528069/chatgpt-in-classroom-canada/


ChatGPT in the classroom: Why some Canadian teachers, professors are embracing AI 

 
WATCH: Answering with AI: How ChatGPT is shaking up online information searches – Jan 30, 2023

In December, Brendan Benson started noticing his Grade 12 students were handing in essays that looked the same.

“I had voices that resembled one another,” said Benson, who teaches English at Pickering College in Newmarket, Ont.

He knew his students often relied on apps like Grammarly or AutoCorrect. But this was different.

“I started to wonder about students’ writing process,” he said. It wasn’t long before he figured out the answer was ChatGPT, an artificial intelligence chatbot, often used as a search engine alternative.

READ MORE: ChatGPT wouldn’t exist without Canadian AI pioneers. Why one fears for the future

It can respond to prompts by composing jokes, songs, poetry and long, complex responses – including essays.

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But instead of scolding his students and banishing the technology, Benson let them explain how they were using it, and last month came up with a plan for how to assess assignments done with the chatbot’s help.

He’s among teachers and professors across Canada who are inviting ChatGPT into the classroom, amid debate about ethics, plagiarism and other potential pitfalls.

Benson said he saw an opportunity to work with ChatGPT and encourage critical thinking among students, who he believed could do better than AI.

To help him assess assignments aided by ChatGPT, students were asked to submit transcripts of their conversations with the AI and explain what they learned about the writing process. They were excited, said Benson.

“When I put up the option to use ChatGPT, (one) student smiled – he just said, ‘This is the most progressive, exciting thing I’ve ever been asked to do. This is great, I’m on board.”’

Click to play video: 'Concerns over TikTok & ChatGPT'
Concerns over TikTok & ChatGPT

Joshua Armstrong, director of teaching and learning at Pickering College, said AI is going to be part of education and he’s concerned about the ethical implications.

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“We still want students to understand what plagiarism looks like,” he said. “It’s a core principle that we’ve taught our students for generations.”

He said it comes down to “good teaching around how to source something that you use from AI.”

At the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Patrick Parra Pennefather has just finished a project in which students used ChatGPT to write a play in the style of William Shakespeare.

Pennefather, an assistant professor in the department of theatre and film, had students use ChatGPT to help write a scene in which Macbeth, Portia, Othello and Shylock _ characters from three different Shakespeare plays – all meet.

READ MORE: AI programs like ChatGPT could change Saskatchewan education, experts say

“I encourage my students to try to go and play creatively with these generators to see how they can get them to create content they are curious about. So, Shakespeare is a perfect example,” said Pennefather.

Pennefather also asked students to test how ChatGPT writes essays and established that the AI loves using “in conclusion” to start an essay’s final paragraph.

He sees it as a way of equipping students with the knowledge of how to navigate tools such as ChatGPT while improving their critical thinking. As a result, one of his students realized he was writing in a formulaic way and is now exploring new ways to compose.

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Pretending AI tools did not exist was no solution, said Pennefather, and it was better to inspire students about how best to use them

“It’s a good thing. My impression of students is I trust them and they want to engage in every aspect of the courses that I teach.”

Click to play video: 'AI programs like ChatGPT could change Saskatchewan education, experts say'
AI programs like ChatGPT could change Saskatchewan education, experts say

But some educators remain wary of ethical risks.

Garth Nichols, vice-principal of Havergal College, a Toronto-based independent girls school from kindergarten to Grade 12, wants students to understand the significance of intellectual property as AI becomes a part of learning.

He said ChatGPT did not produce extracts from existing prose or texts, but instead was a “large language model,” a type of algorithm that bases its output on vast amounts of data. In so doing it could produce content without proper citation of the original creators.

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That raised “really good questions about intellectual property and copyright,” Nichols said.

READ MORE: AI and breast cancer: How a Canadian lab plans to use new tech to treat patients

He said students would have to apply critical thinking to come up with ways to add value and avoid plagiarism.

Rundle College Society, a Calgary-based independent school, has been approaching AI with curiosity.

Headmaster Jason Rogers said the school is taking an informal, exploratory approach to AI in classrooms.

“Once we start to deeply consider those questions, we can look at more innovative and contextual approaches to implementing changes.”

He said the goal is to introduce AI chatbot assistance in kindergarten to Grade 12 classes in the coming months.

The chatbot is also being discussed at the public school level.

Click to play video: 'How ChatGPT is impacting learning'
How ChatGPT is impacting learning

The Calgary Board of Education said it is looking at opportunities and challenges presented by AI in its schools.

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A spokeswoman for Edmonton Public Schools said it has been monitoring the development and evolution of AI and how it affects schools and students. In February, the board held a session for teachers on AI tools.

The Vancouver School Board released a podcast last week focusing on ChatGPT and discussing how it would affect students and teachers.

Jeff Spence, a speaker on the podcast and district principal of information technology at the school board, said he had encouraged teachers to test ChatGPT out.

READ MORE: Canadian universities crafting ChatGPT policies as French school bans AI program

“I think the most important thing with any new technology is to not be afraid of it and to not hide from it, but learn about it and to go and try it out,” said Spence. “I am very excited about all new technologies and how we can use them and especially how students learn better.”

Spence likened the introduction of AI to the arrival of calculators in mathematics classes. Using such tools wasn’t cheating, if teachers knew about their use, he said.

Jutta Treviranus, a Toronto-based professor at the Ontario College of Art and Design University, took part in an online discussion hosted by UBC last week to discuss how AI tools are changing higher education.

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She said educators would have to inspire students to hone adaptation, critical thinking and collaboration skills, rather than set them up for “collision courses” with AI systems.

“If we need to police education, we are doing something wrong,” Treviranus said. “If a machine can do what we are teaching our students to do, we are teaching our students to be machines.”


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