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60% of Teachers Used AI This Year and Saved up to 6 Hours of Work a Week

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  • I actually don't know that much about LLM's. I do know they require a ton of energy to train the models. But once those are trained, the smaller models especially, don't require that much to run, right? I once tried to run a local one to see how much it took, and my gpu maxed out for a few seconds and the LLM spit out text and it was done. While when playing games, the gpu maxes out for hours.

    Again, i don't know super much about them as i have only used it a few times over the years to break down big tasks into smaller tasks for my AuDHD when i am very overwhelmed, and it was kinda nice for that.

    The image generation stuff is pretty bad though from what i have read. Plus it steals peoples art. Fuck that shit.

    Please do tell me if i understand wrong. Because i don't want to contribute to a bunch of bad shit ruining the climate.

    1. It's not like the companies train one model and they use it for months until they need new version. They train new models all the time to update them and test new ideas.
    2. They don't use small models. Typical LLMs offered by ChatGPT or Claude are the big ones
    3. They process thousands of queries per second so their GPUs are maxed out all the time, not just for few seconds.
  • There is no room here for your credulity. No, polls are not accurate. No, the Walmart tax dodge charity foundation is not "reputable."

  • There is no room here for your credulity. No, polls are not accurate. No, the Walmart tax dodge charity foundation is not "reputable."

    Do you have an alternate source that proves your point, or is your entire argument "because I said so"? Whether something avoids taxes or not has little to do with its credibility, you'll need stronger evidence than that.

    And I don't know what you mean by "polls are not accurate." Yeah, they're unreliable for certain things (I.e. predicting election results) because people lie and change their minds, and elections are generally decided on a per-state basis, so just one or two "flipping" is enough to turn an election. They're more reliable for other things, like tracking sentiment across a longer period of time.

    I certainly don't buy the "6 hours saved per week" statement here (that's self-reported and a small sample size), but I do buy that teachers are using AI more and more to assist w/ their work. Surveys can only tell you so much, and it's important to not read too much into them, but that doesn't mean they're worthless or misleading.

    1. It's not like the companies train one model and they use it for months until they need new version. They train new models all the time to update them and test new ideas.
    2. They don't use small models. Typical LLMs offered by ChatGPT or Claude are the big ones
    3. They process thousands of queries per second so their GPUs are maxed out all the time, not just for few seconds.

    Wouldn't it then help to run the smaller ones locally instead of using the big ones like ChatGPT?

    I read that one called Deepmind or something in china took a lot less to train and is just as strong. Is that true?

    What do people usually use LLM's for? I know they suck for most things people are using them for like coding. But what do people use them for that justifies all the hype?

    Again, please don't think i am trying to justify it. I just don't know super much about them.

  • I literally only ever use it to rewrite things I’ve already written or to get my thoughts started when I’m having writer’s block (professional writing - not a creative writer). I really don’t understand why people use it beyond that. I don’t like having to check its homework all the damn time

    Basically it’s just a tool for getting me to phrase or look at something differently. I can get tunnel vision when I’m writing or trying to come up with ideas.

    I could give you a few real-life examples where it’s been helpful to me, but honestly, there are probably hundreds more depending on the person—as long as it’s used properly and not treated as flawless or final.

    I’m a kindergarten teacher.

    1. I describe what we’ve done in class, and it turns that into a short caption for the school’s daily social media post. Saves a bit of time.

    2. For weekly assessments, I speak freely about each child’s week, and it generates a well-written comment. That’s a moderate time-saver, and I learn better phrasing from its output as I'm a non-native English speaker.

    3. It helps me brainstorm new daily activity ideas based on specific goals or parameters. I choose the ones that fit and tweak them as needed.

    4. When I’ve tried multiple strategies with a difficult child, I use it to get fresh suggestions for guidance or behavior management. I still apply my own experience to decide what works best.

    5. It helped me plan a trip based on location, time, and several other factors—and it provided a lot of useful details I hadn’t considered.

    6. It’s replaced Google for many tasks: it’s faster, often more accurate (if prompted clearly), and definitely more efficient for basic info.

    7. I also use it for translation, and in many cases, it gives better or more natural results than Google Translate.

    8. It helped me rewriting this very comment (till point 7) as I'm busy with something else so I saved time spellchecking and rephrasing.

  • Wouldn't it then help to run the smaller ones locally instead of using the big ones like ChatGPT?

    I read that one called Deepmind or something in china took a lot less to train and is just as strong. Is that true?

    What do people usually use LLM's for? I know they suck for most things people are using them for like coding. But what do people use them for that justifies all the hype?

    Again, please don't think i am trying to justify it. I just don't know super much about them.

    Small models can only handle limited set of tasks. To cover a lot of different tasks you would need a lot of small models. What DeepSeek did was build a lot of small models with each acting as an expert on one topic (more or less). It's more energy efficient to train but not necessarily to run as you have to chain a lot of small models to get good results.

    What do people use LLM for? Asking questions you would normally ask Google. Google sucks now so it's easier to ask ChatGPT. You can also use it for simple tasks like checking text for grammar errors, writing emails and so on.

  • Yes, we are. I have a maths teacher friend, who complains endlessly about the shit that Sam Altman lies about, and yet they pay for ChatGPT and refuse to simply not use it. I swear it's worse than meth in terms of how it grabs some people.

    Its HIGHLY addictive, especially to idiots. They feel smart using it. Which is so ironic I can't stand it.

  • i'm reporting the post because it is from a blatant disinfo house that spreads rhetoric about "critical race theory" and other obvious dogwhistles

    it is not a coincidence that AI is being pushed so hard by conservative racists

    Yep, and who owns the models? Billionaires. What are billionaires always? Conservatives. It isn't hard to connect the dots on why this path is not a good one.

  • Teachers use AI to generate assignments, kids use AI to generate answers, teachers use AI to grade answers.

    Yeah, we're cooked.

    Well, it can't clean toilets or build roads, so you can still do that for your elite billionaire overlords, and they may give you a prison cell to exist in!

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    The poll, published by the research firm and the Walton Family Foundation... Walton Family Foundation provides financial support to The 74.

    What kind of fool would believe anything from these grifters?

    Phony AF at its face.

  • Hastags killed

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    klu9@lemmy.caK
    £ says: "The fuck they are, mate!"
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    eyekaytee@aussie.zoneE
    They will say something like solar went from 600gw to 1000 thats a 66% increase this year and coal only increased 40% except coal is 3600gw to 6400. Hrmmmm, maybe these numbers are outdated? Based on this coal and gas are down: In Q1 2025, solar generation rose 48% compared to the same period in 2024. Solar power reached 254 TWh, making up 10% of total electricity. This was the largest increase among all clean energy sources. Coal-fired electricity dropped by 4%, falling to 1,421 TWh. Gas-fired power also went down by 4%, reaching 67 TWh https://carboncredits.com/china-sets-clean-energy-record-in-early-2025-with-951-tw/ are no where close to what is required to meet their climate goals Which ones in particular are you talking about? Trump signs executive order directing US withdrawal from the Paris climate agreement — again https://apnews.com/article/trump-paris-agreement-climate-change-788907bb89fe307a964be757313cdfb0 China vowed on Tuesday to continue participating in two cornerstone multinational arrangements -- the World Health Organization and Paris climate accord -- after newly sworn-in US President Donald Trump ordered withdrawals from them. https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20250121-china-says-committed-to-who-paris-climate-deal-after-us-pulls-out What's that saying? You hate it when the person you hate is doing good? I can't remember what it is I can't fault them for what they're doing at the moment, even if they are run by an evil dictatorship and do pollute the most I’m not sure how european defense spending is relevant It suggests there is money available in the bank to fund solar/wind/battery, but instead they are preparing for? something? what? who knows. France can make a fighter jet at home but not solar panels apparently. Prehaps they would be made in a country with environmental and labour laws if governments legislated properly to prevent companies outsourcing manufacturing. However this doesnt absolve china. China isnt being forced at Gunpoint to produce these goods with low labour regulation and low environmental regulation. You're right, it doesn't absolve china, and I avoid purchasing things from them wherever possible, my solar panels and EV were made in South Korea, my home battery was made in Germany, there are only a few things in my house made in China, most of them I got second hand but unfortunately there is no escaping the giant of manufacturing. With that said it's one thing for me to sit here and tut tut at China, but I realise I am not most people, the most clearest example is the extreme anti-ai, anti-billionaire bias on this platform, in real life most people don't give a fuck, they love Amazon/Microsoft/Google/Apple etc, they can't go a day without them. So I consider myself a realist, if you want people to buy your stuff then you will need to make the conditions possible for them to WANT to buy your stuff, not out of some moral lecture and Europe isn't doing that, if we look at energy prices: Can someone actually point out to me where this comes from? ... At the end of the day energy is a small % of EU household spending I was looking at corporate/business energy use: Major European companies are already moving to cut costs and retain their competitive edge. For example, Thyssenkrupp, Germany’s largest steelmaker, said on Monday it would slash 11,000 jobs in its steel division by 2030, in a major corporate reshuffle. https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/High-Energy-Costs-Continue-to-Plague-European-Industry.html Prices have since fallen but are still high compared to other countries. A poll by Germany's DIHK Chambers of Industry and Commerce of around 3,300 companies showed that 37% were considering cutting production or moving abroad, up from 31% last year and 16% in 2022. For energy-intensive industrial firms some 45% of companies were mulling slashing output or relocation, the survey showed. "The trust of the German economy in energy policy is severely damaged," Achim Dercks, DIHK deputy chief executive said, adding that the government had not succeeded in providing companies with a perspective for reliable and affordable energy supply. https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/more-german-companies-mull-relocation-due-high-energy-prices-survey-2024-08-01/ I've seen nothing to suggest energy prices in the EU are SO cheap that it's worth moving manufacturing TO Europe, and this is what annoys me the most. I've pointed this out before but they have an excellent report on the issues: https://commission.europa.eu/document/download/97e481fd-2dc3-412d-be4c-f152a8232961_en?filename=The+future+of+European+competitiveness+_+A+competitiveness+strategy+for+Europe.pdf Then they put out this Competitive Compass: https://commission.europa.eu/topics/eu-competitiveness/competitiveness-compass_en But tbh every week in the EU it seems like they are chasing after some other goal. This would be great, it would have been greater 10 years ago. Agreed
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    It was very boring.
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    … it was
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    dual_sport_dork@lemmy.worldD
    Especially when the poster does not disclose that it's AI. The perpetual Youtube rabbit hole occasionally lands on one of these for me when I leave it unsupervised, and usually you can tell from the "cover" art. But only if you're looking at it. Because if you just leave it going in the background eventually you start to realize, "Wow, this guy really tripped over the fine line between a groove and rut." Then you click on it and look: Curses! Foiled again. And golly gee, I'm sure glad Youtube took away the option to oughtright block channels. I'm sure that's a total coincidence. W/e. I'm a have-it-on-my-hard-drive kind of bird. Yt-dlp is your friend. Just use it to nab whatever it is you actually want and let your own media player decide how to shuffle and present it. This works great for big name commercial music as well, whereupon the record labels are inevitably dumb enough to post songs and albums in their entirety right there you Youtube. Who even needs piracy sites at that rate? Yoink!