英語(yǔ)閱讀 學(xué)英語(yǔ),練聽(tīng)力,上聽(tīng)力課堂! 注冊(cè) 登錄
> 輕松閱讀 > 英語(yǔ)漫讀 >  內(nèi)容

人工智能時(shí)代該教孩子學(xué)什么

所屬教程:英語(yǔ)漫讀

瀏覽:

2016年04月17日

手機(jī)版
掃描二維碼方便學(xué)習(xí)和分享
Pity school careers advisers. If economists are to bebelieved, vast numbers of jobs will have evaporatedby the time today’s pupils reach the labour market.Oxford university’s Carl Benedikt Frey and MichaelOsborne say almost half of the jobs in the US are athigh risk from computerisation in the next twodecades, together with two-thirds of those in Indiaand three-quarters in China.

學(xué)校的就業(yè)顧問(wèn)真可憐。如果經(jīng)濟(jì)學(xué)家的話(huà)可以相信,當(dāng)如今的小學(xué)生有朝一日進(jìn)入勞動(dòng)力市場(chǎng)時(shí),大量就業(yè)崗位將已經(jīng)消失。牛津大學(xué)(Oxford university)的卡爾•貝內(nèi)迪克特•弗雷(Carl Benedikt Frey)和邁克爾•奧斯本(Michael Osborne)稱(chēng),未來(lái)二十年,美國(guó)幾乎一半的就業(yè)崗位、印度三分之二的崗位以及中國(guó)四分之三的工作都很可能被計(jì)算機(jī)取代。

While workers worry about whether robots will take their jobs, teachers are wondering how touse education to insulate the next generation from such a fate. This has worked before. Whenthe last wave of automation swept the developed world at the start of the 20th century,policymakers decided education was the answer. If machines were going to substitute forbrawn, they reasoned, more people would need to use their brains.

在勞動(dòng)者擔(dān)心機(jī)器人是否會(huì)搶走他們的飯碗之際,老師們卻在思考如何利用教育使下一代人免遭這種命運(yùn)。這種方法以前成功過(guò)。20世紀(jì)初,當(dāng)上一波自動(dòng)化浪潮席卷發(fā)達(dá)世界時(shí),政策制定者認(rèn)定,解決方案是教育。如果機(jī)器將取代人類(lèi)的體力,他們推斷,更多人將需要從事腦力勞動(dòng)。

The US invested heavily in education, with good results. Workers reaped the benefits throughbetter jobs and higher wages. Economists Andrew McAfee and Erik Brynjolfsson summed it uplike this: “The industrial revolution started a race between technology and education — and,for most of the 20th century, humans won that race.”

于是美國(guó)大舉投資教育,并取得了很好的效果。勞動(dòng)者通過(guò)更好的工作和薪酬待遇獲得了好處。經(jīng)濟(jì)學(xué)家安德魯•麥卡菲(Andrew McAfee)和埃里克•布林約爾松(Erik Brynjolfsson)這樣總結(jié)道:“工業(yè)革命開(kāi)啟了科技與教育之間的競(jìng)賽——在20世紀(jì)的多數(shù)時(shí)間里,人類(lèi)是這場(chǎng)競(jìng)賽的贏家。”

But the next race will be against technology that replaces brains and brawn. Machine learningalgorithms are already starting to supplant the likes of mergers and acquisition bankers andcurrency traders. Some experts argue we need to respond with another fundamental rethinkof education.

但是,下一場(chǎng)競(jìng)賽的對(duì)手將是同時(shí)取代人類(lèi)的腦力和體力的技術(shù)。機(jī)器學(xué)習(xí)算法已經(jīng)開(kāi)始取代并購(gòu)業(yè)務(wù)銀行家和外匯交易員之類(lèi)的崗位。一些專(zhuān)家認(rèn)為,我們需要以再一次徹底反思教育來(lái)應(yīng)對(duì)挑戰(zhàn)。

“School education has tended to focus on developing the core cognitive competences — forexample, reading, writing and arithmetic,” said Andy Haldane, the Bank of England’s chiefeconomist, in a recent speech. “Smart machines have long since surpassed humans in theirability to do the first and third of these. And they are fast catching-up on the second. That begsthe question of whether there are other skills where humans’ comparative advantage isgreater.”

“學(xué)校教育往往注重開(kāi)發(fā)核心認(rèn)知能力——例如,閱讀、寫(xiě)作和算術(shù),”英國(guó)央行(Bank of England)首席經(jīng)濟(jì)學(xué)家安迪•霍爾丹(Andy Haldane)在最近一次演講中表示,“智能機(jī)器早已在第一項(xiàng)和第三項(xiàng)上超越了人類(lèi)。同時(shí)它們?cè)诘诙?xiàng)上奮起直追。這就引出了一個(gè)問(wèn)題:有沒(méi)有人類(lèi)擁有更大比較優(yōu)勢(shì)的其他技能?”

So what skills should we teach our children to robot-proof their careers?

因此,為了讓我們的孩子免遭被機(jī)器人搶走工作的命運(yùn),我們應(yīng)該教給他們什么技能?

How to be creative

如何擁有創(chuàng)造力

Artificial intelligence tends to solve problems methodically but the human brain is far betterat making logical leaps of imagination. It is more intuitive, creative and better atpersuasion. Humans can also combine their creativity with robot-surpassing dexterity tocut someone’s hair, for example, or cook a delicious meal. “It’s good to invest in creativeeducation because these are some of the skills that should be left [after automation],” saysStian Westlake, head of policy and research at Nesta, the UK innovation charity.

人工智能往往可以井井有條地解決問(wèn)題,但是人類(lèi)大腦在有邏輯地發(fā)揮想象力、進(jìn)行跳躍性思維方面要出色得多。人腦直覺(jué)更好、更具創(chuàng)造性、更有說(shuō)服力。人類(lèi)還可以結(jié)合自己的創(chuàng)造力和讓機(jī)器人望塵莫及的靈巧,去給人理發(fā)或者烹調(diào)美食。“投資創(chuàng)造性方面的教育很好,因?yàn)閯?chuàng)造力屬于(自動(dòng)化)應(yīng)該無(wú)法取代的技能,”英國(guó)國(guó)家科技藝術(shù)基金會(huì)(Nesta)政策和研究主管斯蒂安•韋斯特萊克(Stian Westlake)稱(chēng)。

When you start to look at the world like this, you turn some familiar tropes about globaleducation on their head.

當(dāng)你開(kāi)始這樣看待世界時(shí),你會(huì)完全改變對(duì)一些有關(guān)全球教育的常見(jiàn)比喻的看法。

Mr Westlake says: “It’s a paradoxical story where countries like the UK come out well, becauseour creative economy is quite strong. We beat ourselves up over our inability to be as good atSingapore and Shanghai at coding and things like this, but actually it turns out it’s quitepossible that sort of stuff is going to be the stuff that’s very easy for artificial intelligence toautomate.”

韋斯特萊克稱(chēng):“出人意料的是,因?yàn)閯?chuàng)意經(jīng)濟(jì)相當(dāng)強(qiáng)勁,英國(guó)等國(guó)家會(huì)安然無(wú)恙。我們因?yàn)樽约涸诰幋a等方面的能力不如新加坡和上海而苛責(zé)自己,但是事實(shí)上,這類(lèi)工作最后很可能會(huì)是人工智能很容易用自動(dòng)化取代的東西。”

How to be nice

情商致勝

Some machines may have learnt how to seem caring but humans still have an unsurpassedability to empathise with others. The new phrase is “EQ”, which stands for emotional quotient(or emotional intelligence). “The high-skill, high-pay jobs of the future may involve skillsbetter measured by EQs than IQs, by jobs creating social as much as financial value,” theBOE’s Mr Haldane said.

一些機(jī)器或許已經(jīng)學(xué)會(huì)如何表示關(guān)心,但是人類(lèi)仍然擁有機(jī)器無(wú)法超越的“同理”能力。新的說(shuō)法是“情商”(EQ),代表情緒商數(shù)(或情緒智商)。“未來(lái)的高技能、高薪工作需要的技能,可能對(duì)情商的要求高過(guò)對(duì)智商的要求,并要求工作不僅創(chuàng)造經(jīng)濟(jì)價(jià)值,還要?jiǎng)?chuàng)造同樣多的社會(huì)價(jià)值,”英國(guó)央行的霍爾丹稱(chēng)。

Whether or not such skills can be taught is an open question. Still, some organisations aregiving it a go. ING, the Dutch bank, has recently put 350 staff through an “EQ trainingprogramme”. The aim is to teach these bankers how to “build trust with the client throughasking lots more questions and listening out for feelings and beliefs as opposed to justlistening out for content,” explains Steve Ellis, director at Rogensi, a consultancy thatdeveloped the project with ING.

關(guān)于這些技能能否傳授的問(wèn)題尚未定論。不過(guò),一些組織正在嘗試。荷蘭銀行國(guó)際集團(tuán)(ING)最近讓350名員工參加了“情商培訓(xùn)課程”。目的是教這些銀行員工如何“通過(guò)多提問(wèn)題、聆聽(tīng)客戶(hù)的感受和想法(而非只聽(tīng)內(nèi)容),來(lái)建立與客戶(hù)之間的信任,”與ING合作開(kāi)發(fā)該項(xiàng)目的咨詢(xún)公司rogenSi的主管史蒂夫•埃利斯(SteveEllis)稱(chēng)。

One of the exercises involves sitting bankers in a room, showing them pictures of people’s facialexpressions and asking them to identify the emotion felt. Mark Pieter de Boer, head of financialmarket sales at ING, admits some bankers were initially resistant. “Typically, what you see ispeople who are very much IQ-focused struggle with making that change.”

其中一項(xiàng)練習(xí)是,讓銀行員工坐在一個(gè)房間內(nèi),展示一些人們面部表情的圖片,讓他們識(shí)別這些表情反映的情緒。ING金融市場(chǎng)銷(xiāo)售主管馬克•彼得•德博爾(Mark Pieter de Boer)承認(rèn),一些員工一開(kāi)始有抵觸心理。“一般情況下,你看到那些非常注重智商的人很難做出這樣的改變。”

But he says enthusiasm increased when staff saw the training had results. A survey by thecompany found people who had been on the course were more motivated, there was greatercollaboration between departments and productivity increased by 10 per cent.

但是他稱(chēng),當(dāng)員工發(fā)現(xiàn)訓(xùn)練有成效后,他們的積極性提高了。該公司的調(diào)查發(fā)現(xiàn),參加該課程的員工更有干勁,部門(mén)之間的合作更順暢,生產(chǎn)率提高了10%。

Remember the basics

別忘了基本技能

Even if the promised age of artificial intelligence does arrive, experts say we cannot afford todispense with hard cognitive skills such as reading, writing and mathematics.

即使人工智能的有福時(shí)代最終真的到來(lái),專(zhuān)家稱(chēng)我們也不能免除學(xué)習(xí)閱讀、寫(xiě)作和算術(shù)等高難度認(rèn)知技能。

Daisy Christodoulou, research and development manager at the UK’s Ark Schools chain, saysthat, unless we have these foundations in place, we will not have the mental frameworks tosolve higher-order problems creatively.

英國(guó)連鎖學(xué)校Ark Schools的研發(fā)經(jīng)理黛西•克里斯托杜盧(Daisy Christodoulou)稱(chēng),除非掌握這些基本技能,否則我們無(wú)法建立起創(chuàng)造性解決高階問(wèn)題的思維框架。

“Even if we do arrive at a point where most work is done by computers, cognitive skills will stillmatter — not for the economy, but for the successful functioning of a democratic society,” shesays. “In such a society, a great deal will turn on the ownership and regulation of thecomputers and robots doing all the work, and the debates around such issues will require aneducated and informed populace.”

“即使真的到了計(jì)算機(jī)完成大多數(shù)工作的那一天,認(rèn)知技能仍然很重要——不是對(duì)于經(jīng)濟(jì)而言,而是為了民主社會(huì)的順利運(yùn)轉(zhuǎn)。”她稱(chēng),“在那樣的社會(huì)中,對(duì)完成所有工作的計(jì)算機(jī)和機(jī)器人的擁有和監(jiān)管將關(guān)系重大,圍繞這類(lèi)問(wèn)題的討論將需要受過(guò)教育、有知識(shí)的民眾。


用戶(hù)搜索

瘋狂英語(yǔ) 英語(yǔ)語(yǔ)法 新概念英語(yǔ) 走遍美國(guó) 四級(jí)聽(tīng)力 英語(yǔ)音標(biāo) 英語(yǔ)入門(mén) 發(fā)音 美語(yǔ) 四級(jí) 新東方 七年級(jí) 賴(lài)世雄 zero是什么意思昆明市巡津新村15號(hào)院英語(yǔ)學(xué)習(xí)交流群

網(wǎng)站推薦

英語(yǔ)翻譯英語(yǔ)應(yīng)急口語(yǔ)8000句聽(tīng)歌學(xué)英語(yǔ)英語(yǔ)學(xué)習(xí)方法

  • 頻道推薦
  • |
  • 全站推薦
  • 推薦下載
  • 網(wǎng)站推薦