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Australian teachers are some of the highest users of AI in classrooms around the world, survey reveals

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Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Australian teachers are more likely to be using artificial intelligence than their counterparts around the world, according to a .

The OECD's latest also shows Australian teachers are reporting high levels of stress and not enough training to manage student behavior.

What is this survey? And what else does it tell us about Australian teachers?

The Teaching and Learning Survey (also known as "TALIS") is a large-scale survey of 280,000 teachers in 55 around the world, including Australia.

Most of the teachers surveyed came from and (typically up to Year 10 in Australia).

This is the fourth round of TALIS since it began in 2008 and the first since 2018.

Use of AI

Amid about the , many Australian teachers report they are using this emerging technology in their work.

About two thirds (66%) of lower secondary teachers reported using AI in the past year. This puts Australia as the fourth highest country within the OECD, and far above the OECD average of 36%.

Of Australian teachers who used AI, the most common purposes were brainstorming lesson plans and learning about and summarizing content. This was happening for 71% of Australian teachers who used AI.

Australian teachers were unlikely to use AI to review data on student performance (9% of those who use AI, compared to 28% across the OECD) and to assess student work (15%, compared to 30% across the OECD).

These results suggest many Australian teachers are using AI to improve their approach to teaching. But their hesitancy to use it in certain situations suggests there is awareness of concerns around privacy (if student data is uploaded to large language models) and the need to keep using professional judgment (such as when assessing work).

Teacher stress

In Australia, these also arrive at a time of continued concerns about teacher , .

Results show a marked increase in reported stress among Australian teachers, who reported the third highest levels of stress among all OECD countries, up from a ranking of 15th in 2018.

Among lower secondary teachers, Australia ranked highest among all countries where teachers reported experiencing stress frequently at work (34% in Australia compared to 19% across the OECD).

The top sources of stress were "too much administrative work," "too much marking," and "keeping up with curriculum changes."

These results support a drastic decrease in Australian teachers' professional satisfaction since 2015, particularly in the first ten years of their careers.

Australian teachers are some of the highest users of AI in classrooms around the world—new survey
Credit: The Conversation

Teacher education

In recent years, Australian policymakers have increasingly focused on teacher education programs—the university degrees that train teachers for the classroom. Following a , teacher education programs are required to include topics such as the brain and learning, teaching methods and classroom management.

Australian teachers in the TALIS survey appeared, on the whole, happy with their university education. Some 70% of respondents indicated that overall the quality of their was high, on par with 75% of teachers across the OECD.

While Australian teachers say their training provided sufficient curriculum knowledge, they were less positive about preparation for managing classroom behavior.

According to my analysis of the survey data, approximately 50% of Australian teachers were positive about their behavior training, compared to 63% across the OECD. This matches of teachers struggling with poor student behavior in their classrooms.

What now?

This survey provides high-quality data to understand our education system at a time of rapid change.

It suggests Australian teachers are global leaders in their use of AI. However, much work needs to be done to improve teachers' well-being at work.

Sustaining the teaching profession and the quality of teachers' work is a key national priority. More careful analysis of these results can help guide this work.

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .The Conversation

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