During my lifetime, I have experienced three major revolutions driven by technology; the microprocessor revolution of the 1970s and 1980s; the internet and social communication revolution of the 1990s and 2000s around the internet and phones and gaming, and now the Artificial Intelligence revolution: or AI as it almost universally known.
Over the past week, I have set three different AI sites three different tasks, all using free versions of the software. The tasks were: draft a script for a play; create a website of this blog and turn a poem into a song and add new verses.
I was amazed at the results for all three tasks, and especially how quickly they were performed so early into the AI revolution.
I asked for a script for a play about a closure of a college, and ‘The last assembly’ gave me 5 key characters, four themes for the play and even some possible dialogue for a final speech and how the other characters reacted to its delivery.
In its way, even more impressive was the website created to market this blog. In under 5 minutes, and after a bit of interplay with the AI agent there was a useable website that those, I have sent it to thought was an attractive website. Sure, there were a few wrinkles to iron out, such as the wrong date being assigned to some posts used as examples, and the first version being just in monochrome. But, 5 minutes, and free, and perfection is expected!
The third task took a poem I had written to celebrate a music festival’s 40th anniversary and created a song for primary school-children based upon a first two verses from the poem that I had created.
Here was the poem’s first three verses.
Sing for the sound of singing
Sing for the joy of singing
Sing for the harmony of singing:
So, sing we all together.
As we sing together here,
Different schools, but single purpose,
Combining in this special place
For forty summers since.
Forty years of many pupils,
staff and parents, come all to
Celebrate in song and sounds
Old, new, would be traditional.
And my attempt at a song, something I have never tried to do before.
[C] Sing, sing, sing
[F] Sing for the joy of singing
[C] Sing, sing, sing,
[G] Sing for the sound of singing
- So we
- sing to·[C] gether.
[Am] Let us sing as one
[F] Different schools,
[C] but single purpose,
- Let us
- sing to·[C] gether.
Here’s what AI added
[C] Raise, raise, raise
[F] Raise up your voice in chorus
[C] Loud, proud, strong,
[G] Let every heart sing with us
- So we
- sing to·[C] gether.
[Am] Every voice belongs
[F] Every note a story
[C] Blending dreams
[G] in shared harmony
- Let us
- sing to·[C] gether.
[C] Hope, hope, hope
[F] Hope in the songs we’re sharing
[C] Shine, shine, shine,
[G] Shine with the love we’re bearing
- As we
- sing to·[C] gether.
I was also offered platforms where the backing track could be created. Now, the poem was written in an hour after receiving the invite, and isn’t great literature, so the song isn’t a work of art, but AI was asked for something primary school children might sing, and I think that’s what was created.
If I can do these three things with no tutorial support in less than half an hour all told, then we have to take AI, and its implications for our school system seriously now.
These three tasks were relatively value-free, but AI has the power to drive thinking, values and morals.
With the government extending the franchise to those aged 16 or above, what we teach in school is now of vital importance, and it must no longer be just a diet of facts or an attempt to create a purpose for handwriting other than as an art form. Politicians of all parties need to think seriously and quickly about what we need to teach in schools.
This blog was created by a human except for the verses of the song that were created by AI