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Hauptverfasser: McKenna, Thomas J, Rasmussen, Ingvill, Ludvigsen, Sten, Arvatz, Avivit, Asterhan, Christa, Chen, Gaowei, Cohen, Julie, Flammia, Michele, Han, Dongkeun, Hayward, Emma, Hill, Heather, Kolikant, Yifat, Lehndorf, Helen, Li, Kexin, Matsumura, Lindsay Clare, Tjønn, Henrik, Wang, Pengjin, Wegerif, Rupert
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2025
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Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.05625
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author McKenna, Thomas J
Rasmussen, Ingvill
Ludvigsen, Sten
Arvatz, Avivit
Asterhan, Christa
Chen, Gaowei
Cohen, Julie
Flammia, Michele
Han, Dongkeun
Hayward, Emma
Hill, Heather
Kolikant, Yifat
Lehndorf, Helen
Li, Kexin
Matsumura, Lindsay Clare
Tjønn, Henrik
Wang, Pengjin
Wegerif, Rupert
author_facet McKenna, Thomas J
Rasmussen, Ingvill
Ludvigsen, Sten
Arvatz, Avivit
Asterhan, Christa
Chen, Gaowei
Cohen, Julie
Flammia, Michele
Han, Dongkeun
Hayward, Emma
Hill, Heather
Kolikant, Yifat
Lehndorf, Helen
Li, Kexin
Matsumura, Lindsay Clare
Tjønn, Henrik
Wang, Pengjin
Wegerif, Rupert
contents Educational dialogue -- the collaborative exchange of ideas through talk -- is widely recognized as a catalyst for deeper learning and critical thinking in and across contexts. At the same time, artificial intelligence (AI) has rapidly emerged as a powerful force in education, with the potential to address major challenges, personalize learning, and innovate teaching practices. However, these advances come with significant risks: rapid AI development can undermine human agency, exacerbate inequities, and outpace our capacity to guide its use with sound policy. Human learning presupposes cognitive efforts and social interaction (dialogues). In response to this evolving landscape, an international workshop titled "Educational Dialogue: Moving Thinking Forward" convened 19 leading researchers from 11 countries in Cambridge (September 1-3, 2025) to examine the intersection of AI and educational dialogue. This AI-focused strand of the workshop centered on three critical questions: (1) When is AI truly useful in education, and when might it merely replace human effort at the expense of learning? (2) Under what conditions can AI use lead to better dialogic teaching and learning? (3) Does the AI-human partnership risk outpacing and displacing human educational work, and what are the implications? These questions framed two days of presentations and structured dialogue among participants.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2511_05625
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Report from Workshop on Dialogue alongside Artificial Intelligence
McKenna, Thomas J
Rasmussen, Ingvill
Ludvigsen, Sten
Arvatz, Avivit
Asterhan, Christa
Chen, Gaowei
Cohen, Julie
Flammia, Michele
Han, Dongkeun
Hayward, Emma
Hill, Heather
Kolikant, Yifat
Lehndorf, Helen
Li, Kexin
Matsumura, Lindsay Clare
Tjønn, Henrik
Wang, Pengjin
Wegerif, Rupert
Computers and Society
Artificial Intelligence
Educational dialogue -- the collaborative exchange of ideas through talk -- is widely recognized as a catalyst for deeper learning and critical thinking in and across contexts. At the same time, artificial intelligence (AI) has rapidly emerged as a powerful force in education, with the potential to address major challenges, personalize learning, and innovate teaching practices. However, these advances come with significant risks: rapid AI development can undermine human agency, exacerbate inequities, and outpace our capacity to guide its use with sound policy. Human learning presupposes cognitive efforts and social interaction (dialogues). In response to this evolving landscape, an international workshop titled "Educational Dialogue: Moving Thinking Forward" convened 19 leading researchers from 11 countries in Cambridge (September 1-3, 2025) to examine the intersection of AI and educational dialogue. This AI-focused strand of the workshop centered on three critical questions: (1) When is AI truly useful in education, and when might it merely replace human effort at the expense of learning? (2) Under what conditions can AI use lead to better dialogic teaching and learning? (3) Does the AI-human partnership risk outpacing and displacing human educational work, and what are the implications? These questions framed two days of presentations and structured dialogue among participants.
title Report from Workshop on Dialogue alongside Artificial Intelligence
topic Computers and Society
Artificial Intelligence
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.05625