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The new age of AI

The new age of AI

Straits Times5 days ago
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The world's most advanced AI models are exhibiting troubling new behaviours – lying, scheming, and even threatening their creators to achieve their goals.
This is a special Straits Times resource for pre-university students as part of The Straits Times-Ministry of Education News Outreach Programme.
The team behind the ST-MOE News Outreach Programme has compiled a series of news resources for you. This week, we look at artificial intelligence.
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Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox SINGAPORE – Young people need to develop strong judgment, reasoning abilities and foundational knowledge, even as artificial intelligence (AI) tools are able to perform both mundane and complex tasks, said Minister for Education Desmond Lee. AI cannot supplant learning – it must enable it, he said to the media on July 8 at Oasis Primary School in Punggol, in his first school visit since his appointment as education minister. Other key priorities for the Ministry of Education (MOE) include helping students develop social and emotional skills and effect a 'generational shift' away from competition based on grades and towards a passion for learning. Mr Lee cited the example of how AI could help young lawyers draft submissions, but only those with proper training and experience are able to assess and improve on the AI output. 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