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Is Education Losing the Race with Technology?

AI's Progress in Maths and Reading

image of Is Education Losing the Race with Technology?

Advances in artificial intelligence (AI) are ushering in a large and rapid technological transformation. Understanding how AI capabilities relate to human skills and how they develop over time is crucial for understanding this process.

In 2016, the OECD assessed AI capabilities with the OECD’s Survey of Adult Skills (PIAAC). The present report follows up the earlier study, collecting expert judgements in 2021 on whether computers can solve the PIAAC literacy and numeracy tests. It is part of a comprehensive ongoing project on assessing AI.

This study shows that AI could potentially outperform large shares of the population on PIAAC – 90% of adults in literacy and 57-88% of adults in numeracy. AI’s literacy capabilities had improved considerably since the 2016 assessment. According to experts, AI will solve the entire literacy and numeracy tests by 2026.

These findings have important implications for employment and education. Large shares of the workforce use literacy and numeracy skills daily at work with a proficiency comparable or below that of computers. AI could affect the literacy- and numeracy-related tasks of these workers. In this context, education systems should strengthen the foundation skills of students and workers and teach them to work together with AI.

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Methodology for assessing AI capabilities using the Survey of Adult Skills (PIAAC)

This chapter describes the methodology of assessing computers’ capabilities to solve the questions of the Survey of Adult Skills of the Programme for International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC). It first provides an overview of the PIAAC test, the skills it measures and the test questions used to measure them. The chapter then describes the methods used to select experts, to collect expert judgement, to develop the questionnaire and to construct aggregate measures of artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities in literacy and numeracy. The focus is on the methodological improvements on the assessment approach used in the pilot study. The chapter concludes with a summary of the methodological challenges encountered in the study and the attempts to solve them.

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