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I have my doubts about this, but it's an interesting experiment and charter schools are great for that.
Also, the kids aren't just ignored for the rest of the school day. They spend most of their time being taught by humans.
Edit: One interesting possibility is that simply teaching young kids to interact with computers will in itself be beneficial for them. I introduced my friend's second grader to Minecraft and he learned a lot of very useful skills because of that. At the beginning he had to be taught to use a mouse, but he got the hang of it quickly and soon he wasn't just playing the game. He was reading the wiki, watching tutorials on YouTube, etc. That's learning how to learn, which is arguably more important than learning anything specific.
(Now he's a 5th grader who wants a 3D printer for Christmas and I suspect that that may somehow be related to Minecraft too. He's probably a little too young for the printer but I suppose it's better to start early than to start late. One of my adult friends started being taught how to program when he was nine and he has gone very far, although I'm sure that simply being the sort of person who is capable of learning to program at nine played a huge role in that.)
This charter school's software is probably not as interesting as Minecraft yet, but that might be the direction where things are headed. A personal tutor that's infinitely patient opens up interesting possibilities.
You are way too optimistic about this, have you used a spellcheck ever? This is a terrible idea.
What's wrong with spellcheckers? The only problem I have had with them is that they're triggered by technical terms, but that's just a minor inconvenience.
(Thinking I have the spellchecker on when I don't and therefore leaving mistakes in can also be a problem, but it's not strictly the spellchecker's fault.)
Also, before anyone asks, I do find ChatGPT and similar software quite useful.
https://tenor.com/search/autocorrect-meme-gifs
Ah, I was thinking of autocorrect on PCs, which generally won't change what you wrote without your input. I swipe to type on my phone and the phone does often interpret my gestures as a word other than the one that I intended, but my gestures are so imprecise that I think the phone does a remarkably good job even if I do have to proofread afterwards.
I expect that the phones will do better once they have AI capable of noticing things the user clearly didn't intend to write.
Spellcheck and autocorrect are AI, lol.
I suppose they're AI in a very general sense according to which even simple, deterministic programs such as one that plays tic-tac-toe are AI, but they're not generative models like the software people people usually have in mind when they say "AI" is.
Ummm, dude where are you getting this info? It's the OG of AI. It learns from your mistakes and teaches the model.
Edit: Do you know what AI is? I suggest looking at what it really does.