Minister rejects claims Government late in tackling AI in schools
Hildegarde Naughton speaking at the Irish National Teachers' Organisation's annual congress in Killarney. Picture: Moya Nolan
Education minister Hildegarde Naughton has rejected suggestions that the Governmentâs new taskforce on AI in schools is a belated attempt to catch up with the challenges the technology poses.
She said âa lot of work has happened to dateâ regarding the impact of AI.
Ms Naughton on Tuesday morning announced the establishment of the AI in Schools External Advisory Taskforce to âconsider the implications of AI for teaching, learning, and assessment across the school systemâ.
It came as the Association of Secondary Teachers, Ireland convened for its annual conference in Wexford, where dismay over the impact of AI on compulsory Leaving Cert project work â introduced for science subjects and business last September â was a dominant theme.
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The Department of Education approved the use of AI for such project work last year, provided it is adequately cited.Â
Many teachers are of the opinion that such use may be undetectable, and that the onus for tracking the use of AI should not be on them.
Asked why the same taskforce was not convened several years ago before introducing the use of AI into the syllabus, given the topic has been troubling educators for the past half-decade, Ms Naughton said âthis isnât the start of it nowâ.
She cited the publication of guidance on AI by her department last year as a clear example of how AI has been tackled proactively.
Ms Naughton said her department is âworking with our European counterparts... around guidelines, around toolkits for our students and our teachers, to make sure that weâre using AI responsibly and ethically.
âThis isnât the starting point. A lot of work has happened to date,â she said, adding that the taskforce had been âsomething that the unions wanted as wellâ.Â
Ms Naughton said the taskforce would be reporting to her each quarter âso that weâre getting updates in relation to the tools and supports for our schoolsâ.
The taskforce announcement, made just ahead of the opening of the ASTI conference, came as something of a surprise, with union president Padraig Curley departing briefly from his prepared remarks to say it âmay be a step in the right directionâ.
Ms Naughton said the âgenie is out of the bottleâ with regard to AI.Â
âArtificial intelligence is here to stay. It's really important that we are adapting to this new digital world, that we are equipping our young people around the ethical and the responsible use of artificial intelligence.âÂ
She insisted there is ânothing wrong with using artificial intelligence, as long as you reference itâ.
Asked separately about the ASTIâs vote to move oral exams back into term time from their current Easterâholiday slot, Ms Naughton said she did not feel the previous arrangement â where language teachers left their classes to conduct exams â represented âa very good use of teacher timeâ.
The orals were first moved to the Easter holidays during the covid pandemic mainly due to issues sourcing adequate numbers of qualified examiners during term.
Ms Naughton said that keeping the orals during Easter break âallows for students to get at least a 10-day break after they do their oral exams before they go back into courseworkâ.



