Home Artificial Intelligence Launched ‘Teach AI’, a non-profit AI education organization

Launched ‘Teach AI’, a non-profit AI education organization

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Launched ‘Teach AI’, a non-profit AI education organization

(Photo = teachai.org)

A non-profit organization to assist educate artificial intelligence (AI) has been launched. As AI technology develops rapidly, plainly the demand for AI educational content for college students and teachers has increased.

On the 2nd (local time), Giggwire, led by Code.org, a non-profit computer science education platform, provides technical experts from Microsoft, Amazon, and OpenAI, in addition to ETS and international technical education that operates TOEFL and TOEIC. It was reported that ‘Teach AI (teachai.org)’ participated by the Institute of Science and Technology (ISTE) and the World Economic Forum (WEF) was launched.

TeachAI intends to offer AI education standards and courses, tools, assessments, skilled learning and policy alternatives that might be integrated into curricula in primary and secondary schools worldwide. The goal is to enable future generations to make use of AI safely and ethically.

Teach AI plans to gather feedback and share learnings through webinars, blogs, emails and social media, along with generating reports and guidelines related to AI training. It also opens the door for organizations from the general public, private and non-profit sectors to partner and participate to form a broader education community.

The World Economic Forum also identified in a report on the 2nd (local time) that higher education should be reinvented to arrange for the generative AI revolution. To this end, it is usually recommended that the curriculum be reorganized in a way that increases literacy on technology and data.

He also proposed designing experience programs for AI workplaces to find out how AI is transforming the workplace and reinventing the university education system to enable lifelong learning.

Previous technological revolutions have also modified work, the World Economic Forum stressed, but AI is transforming work at a totally different pace, appearing concurrently all over the place and all over the place. Accordingly, it was argued that higher education should provide tailored programs to satisfy changing skilled needs.

Jung Byeong-il, expert committee member jbi@aitimes.com

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