When ChatGPT was released to the public in November 2022, advocates and watchdogs warned about the potential for racial bias. The new large language model was created by harvesting 300 billion words from books, articles and online writing, which include racist falsehoods and reflect writers’ implicit biases. Biased training data is likely to generate biased advice, answers and essays. Garbage in, garbage out.
Researchers are starting to document how AI bias manifests in unexpected ways. Inside the research and development arm of the giant testing organization ETS, which administers the SAT, a pair of investigators pitted man against machine in evaluating more than 13,000 essays written by students in grades 8 to 12. They discovered that the AI model that powers ChatGPT penalized Asian American students more than other races and ethnicities in grading the essays. This was purely a research exercise and these essays and machine scores weren’t used in any of ETS’s assessments. But the organization shared its analysis with me to warn schools and teachers about the potential for racial bias when using ChatGPT or other AI apps in the classroom.
AI and humans scored essays differently by race and ethnicity
“Diff” is the difference between the average score given by humans and GPT-4o in this experiment. “Adj. Diff” adjusts this raw number for the randomness of human ratings. (Source: Table from Matt Johnson & Mo Zhang “Using GPT-4o to Score Persuade 2.0 Independent Items” ETS, June 2024 draft)
“Take a little bit of caution and do some evaluation of the scores before presenting them to students,” said Mo Zhang, one of the ETS researchers who conducted the analysis. “There are methods for doing this and you don’t want to take people who specialize in educational measurement out of the equation.”
That might sound self-serving for an employee of a company that specializes in educational measurement. But Zhang’s advice is worth heeding in the excitement to try new AI technology. There are potential dangers as teachers save time by offloading grading work to a robot.
In ETS’s analysis, Zhang and her colleague Matt Johnson fed 13,121 essays into one of the latest versions of the AI model that powers ChatGPT, called GPT 4 Omni or simply GPT-4o. (This version was added to ChatGPT in May 2024, but when the researchers conducted this experiment they used the latest AI model through a different portal.)
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A little background about this large bundle of essays: Students across the nation had originally written these essays between 2015 and 2019 as part of state standardized exams or classroom assessments. Their assignment had been to write an argumentative essay, such as “Should students be allowed to use cell phones in school?” The essays were collected to help scientists develop and test automated writing evaluation.
Each of the essays had been graded by expert raters of writing on a 1-to-6 point scale with 6 being the highest score. ETS asked GPT-4o to score them on the same six-point scale using the same scoring guide that the humans used. Neither man nor machine was told the race or ethnicity of the student, but researchers could see students’ demographic information in the datasets that accompany these essays.
GPT-4o marked the essays almost a point lower than the humans did. The average score across the 13,121 essays was 2.8 for GPT-4o and 3.7 for the humans. But Asian Americans were docked by an additional quarter point. Human evaluators gave Asian Americans a 4.3, on average, while GPT-4o gave them only a 3.2 – roughly a 1.1 point deduction. By contrast, the score difference between humans and GPT-4o was only about 0.9 points for white, Black and Hispanic students. Imagine an ice cream truck that kept shaving off an extra quarter scoop only from the cones of Asian American kids.
“Clearly, this doesn’t seem fair,” wrote Johnson and Zhang in an unpublished report they shared with me. Though the extra penalty for Asian Americans wasn’t terribly large, they said, it’s substantial enough that it shouldn’t be ignored.
The researchers don’t know why GPT-4o issued lower grades than humans, and why it gave an extra penalty to Asian Americans. Zhang and Johnson described the AI system as a “huge black box” of algorithms that operate in ways “not fully understood by their own developers.” That inability to explain a student’s grade on a writing assignment makes the systems especially frustrating to use in schools.
This table compares GPT-4o scores with human scores on the same batch of 13,121 student essays, which were scored on a 1-to-6 scale. Numbers highlighted in green show exact score matches between GPT-4o and humans. Unhighlighted numbers show discrepancies. For example, there were 1,221 essays where humans awarded a 5 and GPT awarded 3. (Source: Matt Johnson & Mo Zhang “Using GPT-4o to Score Persuade 2.0 Independent Items” ETS, June 2024 draft)
This one study isn’t proof that AI is consistently underrating essays or biased against Asian Americans. Other versions of AI sometimes produce different results. A separate analysis of essay scoring by researchers from University of California, Irvine and Arizona State University found that AI essay grades were just as frequently too high as they were too low. That study, which used the 3.5 version of ChatGPT, did not scrutinize results by race and ethnicity.
I wondered if AI bias against Asian Americans was somehow connected to high achievement. Just as Asian Americans tend to score high on math and reading tests, Asian Americans, on average, were the strongest writers in this bundle of 13,000 essays. Even with the penalty, Asian Americans still had the highest essay scores, well above those of white, Black, Hispanic, Native American or multi-racial students.
In both the ETS and UC-ASU essay studies, AI awarded far fewer perfect scores than humans did. For example, in this ETS study, humans awarded 732 perfect 6s, while GPT-4o gave out a grand total of only three. GPT’s stinginess with perfect scores might have affected a lot of Asian Americans who had received 6s from human raters.
ETS’s researchers had asked GPT-4o to score the essays cold, without showing the chatbot any graded examples to calibrate its scores. It’s possible that a few sample essays or small tweaks to the grading instructions, or prompts, given to ChatGPT could reduce or eliminate the bias against Asian Americans. Perhaps the robot would be fairer to Asian Americans if it were explicitly prompted to “give out more perfect 6s.”
The ETS researchers told me this wasn’t the first time that they’ve noticed Asian students treated differently by a robo-grader. Older automated essay graders, which used different algorithms, have sometimes done the opposite, giving Asians higher marks than human raters did. For example, an ETS automated scoring system developed more than a decade ago, called e-rater, tended to inflate scores for students from Korea, China, Taiwan and Hong Kong on their essays for the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), according to a study published in 2012. That may have been because some Asian students had memorized well-structured paragraphs, while humans easily noticed that the essays were off-topic. (The ETS website says it only relies on the e-rater score alone for practice tests, and uses it in conjunction with human scores for actual exams.)
It was also unclear why BERT sometimes treated Asian Americans differently. But it illustrates how important it is to test these systems before we unleash them in schools. Based on educator enthusiasm, however, I fear this train has already left the station. In recent webinars, I’ve seen many teachers post in the chat window that they’re already using ChatGPT, Claude and other AI-powered apps to grade writing. That might be a time saver for teachers, but it could also be harming students.
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This story about AI bias was written by Jill Barshay and produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for Proof Points and other Hechinger newsletters.
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"title": "Researchers Warn of Potential for Racial Bias in AI Apps in the Classroom",
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"content": "\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">When ChatGPT was released to the public in November 2022, advocates and watchdogs warned about the potential for racial bias. The new large language model was created by harvesting \u003c/span>\u003ca href=\"https://www.sciencefocus.com/future-technology/gpt-3\">\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">300 billion words\u003c/span>\u003c/a>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\"> from books, articles and online writing, which include racist falsehoods and reflect writers’ implicit biases. Biased training data is likely to generate biased advice, answers and essays. Garbage in, garbage out. \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">Researchers are starting to document how AI bias manifests in unexpected ways. Inside the research and development arm of the giant testing organization ETS, which administers the SAT, a pair of investigators pitted man against machine in evaluating more than 13,000 essays written by students in grades 8 to 12. They discovered that the AI model that powers ChatGPT penalized Asian American students more than other races and ethnicities in grading the essays. This was purely a research exercise and these essays and machine scores weren’t used in any of ETS’s assessments. But the organization shared its analysis with me to warn schools and teachers about the potential for racial bias when using ChatGPT or other AI apps in the classroom.\u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003ch2>\u003cb>AI and humans scored essays differently by race and ethnicity\u003c/b>\u003c/h2>\n\u003cfigure id=\"attachment_64143\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\" style=\"max-width: 1226px\">\u003cimg loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-64143\" src=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image1.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"1226\" height=\"664\" srcset=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image1.png 1226w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image1-800x433.png 800w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image1-1020x552.png 1020w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image1-160x87.png 160w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image1-768x416.png 768w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1226px) 100vw, 1226px\">\u003cfigcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">“Diff” is the difference between the average score given by humans and GPT-4o in this experiment. “Adj. Diff” adjusts this raw number for the randomness of human ratings. \u003ccite>(Source: Table from Matt Johnson & Mo Zhang “Using GPT-4o to Score Persuade 2.0 Independent Items” ETS, June 2024 draft)\u003c/cite>\u003c/figcaption>\u003c/figure>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">“Take a little bit of caution and do some evaluation of the scores before presenting them to students,” said Mo Zhang, one of the ETS researchers who conducted the analysis. “There are methods for doing this and you don’t want to take people who specialize in educational measurement out of the equation.”\u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">That might sound self-serving for an employee of a company that specializes in educational measurement. But Zhang’s advice is worth heeding in the \u003ca href=\"https://www.kqed.org/mindshift/62462/8-free-ai-powered-tools-that-can-save-teachers-time-and-enhance-instruction\">excitement to try new AI technology\u003c/a>. There are potential dangers as teachers save time by offloading \u003ca href=\"https://www.kqed.org/mindshift/63901/writing-researcher-finds-ai-feedback-better-than-i-thought\">grading work to a robot\u003c/a>.\u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">In ETS’s analysis, Zhang and her colleague Matt Johnson fed 13,121 essays into one of the latest versions of the AI model that powers ChatGPT, called GPT 4 Omni or simply \u003c/span>\u003ca href=\"https://openai.com/index/hello-gpt-4o/\">\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">GPT-4o\u003c/span>\u003c/a>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">. (This version was added to ChatGPT in May 2024, but when the researchers conducted this experiment they used the latest AI model through a different portal.) \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>[ad fullwidth]\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">A little background about this \u003c/span>\u003ca href=\"https://zenodo.org/records/8221504\">\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">large bundle of essays\u003c/span>\u003c/a>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">: Students across the nation had originally written these essays between 2015 and 2019 as part of state standardized exams or classroom assessments. Their assignment had been to write an argumentative essay, such as “Should students be allowed to use cell phones in school?” The essays were collected to help scientists develop and test automated writing evaluation.\u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">Each of the essays had been graded by expert raters of writing on a 1-to-6 point scale with 6 being the highest score. ETS asked GPT-4o to score them on the same six-point scale using the same scoring guide that the humans used. Neither man nor machine was told the race or ethnicity of the student, but researchers could see students’ demographic information in the datasets that accompany these essays.\u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">GPT-4o marked the essays almost a point lower than the humans did. The average score across the 13,121 essays was 2.8 for GPT-4o and 3.7 for the humans. But Asian Americans were docked by an additional quarter point. Human evaluators gave Asian Americans a 4.3, on average, while GPT-4o gave them only a 3.2 – roughly a 1.1 point deduction. By contrast, the score difference between humans and GPT-4o was only about 0.9 points for white, Black and Hispanic students. Imagine an ice cream truck that kept shaving off an extra quarter scoop only from the cones of Asian American kids. \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">“Clearly, this doesn’t seem fair,” wrote Johnson and Zhang in an unpublished report they shared with me. Though the extra penalty for Asian Americans wasn’t terribly large, they said, it’s substantial enough that it shouldn’t be ignored. \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">The researchers don’t know why GPT-4o issued lower grades than humans, and why it gave an extra penalty to Asian Americans. Zhang and Johnson described the AI system as a “huge black box” of algorithms that operate in ways “not fully understood by their own developers.” That inability to explain a student’s grade on a writing assignment makes the systems especially frustrating to use in schools.\u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cfigure id=\"attachment_64142\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\" style=\"max-width: 780px\">\u003cimg loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-64142\" src=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image2.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"780\" height=\"552\" srcset=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image2.png 780w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image2-160x113.png 160w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image2-768x544.png 768w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 780px) 100vw, 780px\">\u003cfigcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">This table compares GPT-4o scores with human scores on the same batch of 13,121 student essays, which were scored on a 1-to-6 scale. Numbers highlighted in green show exact score matches between GPT-4o and humans. Unhighlighted numbers show discrepancies. For example, there were 1,221 essays where humans awarded a 5 and GPT awarded 3. \u003ccite>(Source: Matt Johnson & Mo Zhang “Using GPT-4o to Score Persuade 2.0 Independent Items” ETS, June 2024 draft)\u003c/cite>\u003c/figcaption>\u003c/figure>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">This one study isn’t proof that AI is consistently underrating essays or biased against Asian Americans. Other versions of AI sometimes produce different results. A separate analysis of essay scoring by researchers from University of California, Irvine and Arizona State University found that \u003c/span>\u003ca href=\"https://www.kqed.org/mindshift/63809/ai-essay-grading-could-help-overburdened-teachers-but-researchers-say-it-needs-more-work\">\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">AI essay grades were just as frequently too high as they were too low\u003c/span>\u003c/a>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">. That study, which used the 3.5 version of ChatGPT, did not scrutinize results by race and ethnicity.\u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">I wondered if AI bias against Asian Americans was somehow connected to high achievement. Just as Asian Americans tend to score high on math and reading tests, Asian Americans, on average, were the strongest writers in this bundle of 13,000 essays. Even with the penalty, Asian Americans still had the highest essay scores, well above those of white, Black, Hispanic, Native American or multi-racial students. \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">In both the ETS and UC-ASU essay studies, AI awarded far fewer perfect scores than humans did. For example, in this ETS study, humans awarded 732 perfect 6s, while GPT-4o gave out a grand total of only three. GPT’s stinginess with perfect scores might have affected a lot of Asian Americans who had received 6s from human raters.\u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">ETS’s researchers had asked GPT-4o to score the essays cold, without showing the chatbot any graded examples to calibrate its scores. It’s possible that a few sample essays or small tweaks to the grading instructions, or prompts, given to ChatGPT could reduce or eliminate the bias against Asian Americans. Perhaps the robot would be fairer to Asian Americans if it were explicitly prompted to “give out more perfect 6s.” \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">The ETS researchers told me this wasn’t the first time that they’ve noticed Asian students treated differently by a robo-grader. Older automated essay graders, which used different algorithms, have sometimes done the opposite, giving Asians higher marks than human raters did. For example, an ETS automated scoring system developed more than a decade ago, called e-rater, tended to inflate scores for students from Korea, China, Taiwan and Hong Kong on their essays for the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), according to a \u003c/span>\u003ca href=\"https://doi.org/10.1080/08957347.2012.635502\">\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">study published in 2012\u003c/span>\u003c/a>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">. That may have been because some Asian students had memorized well-structured paragraphs, while humans easily noticed that the essays were off-topic. (The \u003c/span>\u003ca href=\"https://www.ets.org/erater/about.html\">\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">ETS website\u003c/span>\u003c/a>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\"> says it only relies on the e-rater score alone for practice tests, and uses it in conjunction with human scores for actual exams.) \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">Asian Americans also garnered higher marks from an automated scoring system \u003c/span>\u003ca href=\"https://github.com/NAEP-AS-Challenge/reading-prediction\">\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">created during a coding competition in 2021\u003c/span>\u003c/a>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\"> and powered by BERT, which had been the most advanced algorithm before the current generation of large language models, such as GPT. Computer scientists put their experimental robo-grader through a series of tests and discovered that it \u003c/span>\u003ca href=\"https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-031-11644-5_69\">\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">gave higher scores than humans did to Asian Americans’ open-response answers\u003c/span>\u003c/a>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\"> on a reading comprehension test. \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">It was also unclear why BERT sometimes treated Asian Americans differently. But it illustrates how important it is to test these systems before we unleash them in schools. Based on educator enthusiasm, however, I fear this train has already left the station. In recent webinars, I’ve seen many teachers post in the chat window that they’re already using ChatGPT, Claude and other AI-powered apps to grade writing. That might be a time saver for teachers, but it could also be harming students. \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>[ad floatright]\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003ci>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">This story about \u003c/span>\u003c/i>\u003ca href=\"https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-asian-american-ai-bias/\">\u003ci>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">AI bias\u003c/span>\u003c/i>\u003c/a>\u003ci>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\"> was written by Jill Barshay and produced by \u003c/span>\u003c/i>\u003ca href=\"https://hechingerreport.org/special-reports/higher-education/\">\u003ci>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">The Hechinger Report\u003c/span>\u003c/i>\u003c/a>\u003ci>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for \u003c/span>\u003c/i>\u003ca href=\"https://hechingerreport.org/proofpoints/\">\u003ci>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">Proof Points\u003c/span>\u003c/i>\u003c/a>\u003ci>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\"> and other \u003c/span>\u003c/i>\u003ca href=\"https://hechingerreport.org/newsletters/\">\u003ci>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">Hechinger newsletters\u003c/span>\u003c/i>\u003c/a>\u003ci>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">.\u003c/span>\u003c/i>\u003c/p>\n\n",
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"content": "\u003cdiv class=\"post-body\">\u003cp>\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">When ChatGPT was released to the public in November 2022, advocates and watchdogs warned about the potential for racial bias. The new large language model was created by harvesting \u003c/span>\u003ca href=\"https://www.sciencefocus.com/future-technology/gpt-3\">\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">300 billion words\u003c/span>\u003c/a>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\"> from books, articles and online writing, which include racist falsehoods and reflect writers’ implicit biases. Biased training data is likely to generate biased advice, answers and essays. Garbage in, garbage out. \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">Researchers are starting to document how AI bias manifests in unexpected ways. Inside the research and development arm of the giant testing organization ETS, which administers the SAT, a pair of investigators pitted man against machine in evaluating more than 13,000 essays written by students in grades 8 to 12. They discovered that the AI model that powers ChatGPT penalized Asian American students more than other races and ethnicities in grading the essays. This was purely a research exercise and these essays and machine scores weren’t used in any of ETS’s assessments. But the organization shared its analysis with me to warn schools and teachers about the potential for racial bias when using ChatGPT or other AI apps in the classroom.\u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003ch2>\u003cb>AI and humans scored essays differently by race and ethnicity\u003c/b>\u003c/h2>\n\u003cfigure id=\"attachment_64143\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\" style=\"max-width: 1226px\">\u003cimg loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-64143\" src=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image1.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"1226\" height=\"664\" srcset=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image1.png 1226w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image1-800x433.png 800w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image1-1020x552.png 1020w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image1-160x87.png 160w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image1-768x416.png 768w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1226px) 100vw, 1226px\">\u003cfigcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">“Diff” is the difference between the average score given by humans and GPT-4o in this experiment. “Adj. Diff” adjusts this raw number for the randomness of human ratings. \u003ccite>(Source: Table from Matt Johnson & Mo Zhang “Using GPT-4o to Score Persuade 2.0 Independent Items” ETS, June 2024 draft)\u003c/cite>\u003c/figcaption>\u003c/figure>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">“Take a little bit of caution and do some evaluation of the scores before presenting them to students,” said Mo Zhang, one of the ETS researchers who conducted the analysis. “There are methods for doing this and you don’t want to take people who specialize in educational measurement out of the equation.”\u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">That might sound self-serving for an employee of a company that specializes in educational measurement. But Zhang’s advice is worth heeding in the \u003ca href=\"https://www.kqed.org/mindshift/62462/8-free-ai-powered-tools-that-can-save-teachers-time-and-enhance-instruction\">excitement to try new AI technology\u003c/a>. There are potential dangers as teachers save time by offloading \u003ca href=\"https://www.kqed.org/mindshift/63901/writing-researcher-finds-ai-feedback-better-than-i-thought\">grading work to a robot\u003c/a>.\u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">In ETS’s analysis, Zhang and her colleague Matt Johnson fed 13,121 essays into one of the latest versions of the AI model that powers ChatGPT, called GPT 4 Omni or simply \u003c/span>\u003ca href=\"https://openai.com/index/hello-gpt-4o/\">\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">GPT-4o\u003c/span>\u003c/a>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">. (This version was added to ChatGPT in May 2024, but when the researchers conducted this experiment they used the latest AI model through a different portal.) \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003c/p>\u003c/div>",
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"content": "\u003cdiv class=\"post-body\">\u003cp>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">A little background about this \u003c/span>\u003ca href=\"https://zenodo.org/records/8221504\">\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">large bundle of essays\u003c/span>\u003c/a>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">: Students across the nation had originally written these essays between 2015 and 2019 as part of state standardized exams or classroom assessments. Their assignment had been to write an argumentative essay, such as “Should students be allowed to use cell phones in school?” The essays were collected to help scientists develop and test automated writing evaluation.\u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">Each of the essays had been graded by expert raters of writing on a 1-to-6 point scale with 6 being the highest score. ETS asked GPT-4o to score them on the same six-point scale using the same scoring guide that the humans used. Neither man nor machine was told the race or ethnicity of the student, but researchers could see students’ demographic information in the datasets that accompany these essays.\u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">GPT-4o marked the essays almost a point lower than the humans did. The average score across the 13,121 essays was 2.8 for GPT-4o and 3.7 for the humans. But Asian Americans were docked by an additional quarter point. Human evaluators gave Asian Americans a 4.3, on average, while GPT-4o gave them only a 3.2 – roughly a 1.1 point deduction. By contrast, the score difference between humans and GPT-4o was only about 0.9 points for white, Black and Hispanic students. Imagine an ice cream truck that kept shaving off an extra quarter scoop only from the cones of Asian American kids. \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">“Clearly, this doesn’t seem fair,” wrote Johnson and Zhang in an unpublished report they shared with me. Though the extra penalty for Asian Americans wasn’t terribly large, they said, it’s substantial enough that it shouldn’t be ignored. \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">The researchers don’t know why GPT-4o issued lower grades than humans, and why it gave an extra penalty to Asian Americans. Zhang and Johnson described the AI system as a “huge black box” of algorithms that operate in ways “not fully understood by their own developers.” That inability to explain a student’s grade on a writing assignment makes the systems especially frustrating to use in schools.\u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cfigure id=\"attachment_64142\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\" style=\"max-width: 780px\">\u003cimg loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-64142\" src=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image2.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"780\" height=\"552\" srcset=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image2.png 780w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image2-160x113.png 160w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2024/07/image2-768x544.png 768w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 780px) 100vw, 780px\">\u003cfigcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">This table compares GPT-4o scores with human scores on the same batch of 13,121 student essays, which were scored on a 1-to-6 scale. Numbers highlighted in green show exact score matches between GPT-4o and humans. Unhighlighted numbers show discrepancies. For example, there were 1,221 essays where humans awarded a 5 and GPT awarded 3. \u003ccite>(Source: Matt Johnson & Mo Zhang “Using GPT-4o to Score Persuade 2.0 Independent Items” ETS, June 2024 draft)\u003c/cite>\u003c/figcaption>\u003c/figure>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">This one study isn’t proof that AI is consistently underrating essays or biased against Asian Americans. Other versions of AI sometimes produce different results. A separate analysis of essay scoring by researchers from University of California, Irvine and Arizona State University found that \u003c/span>\u003ca href=\"https://www.kqed.org/mindshift/63809/ai-essay-grading-could-help-overburdened-teachers-but-researchers-say-it-needs-more-work\">\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">AI essay grades were just as frequently too high as they were too low\u003c/span>\u003c/a>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">. That study, which used the 3.5 version of ChatGPT, did not scrutinize results by race and ethnicity.\u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">I wondered if AI bias against Asian Americans was somehow connected to high achievement. Just as Asian Americans tend to score high on math and reading tests, Asian Americans, on average, were the strongest writers in this bundle of 13,000 essays. Even with the penalty, Asian Americans still had the highest essay scores, well above those of white, Black, Hispanic, Native American or multi-racial students. \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">In both the ETS and UC-ASU essay studies, AI awarded far fewer perfect scores than humans did. For example, in this ETS study, humans awarded 732 perfect 6s, while GPT-4o gave out a grand total of only three. GPT’s stinginess with perfect scores might have affected a lot of Asian Americans who had received 6s from human raters.\u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">ETS’s researchers had asked GPT-4o to score the essays cold, without showing the chatbot any graded examples to calibrate its scores. It’s possible that a few sample essays or small tweaks to the grading instructions, or prompts, given to ChatGPT could reduce or eliminate the bias against Asian Americans. Perhaps the robot would be fairer to Asian Americans if it were explicitly prompted to “give out more perfect 6s.” \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">The ETS researchers told me this wasn’t the first time that they’ve noticed Asian students treated differently by a robo-grader. Older automated essay graders, which used different algorithms, have sometimes done the opposite, giving Asians higher marks than human raters did. For example, an ETS automated scoring system developed more than a decade ago, called e-rater, tended to inflate scores for students from Korea, China, Taiwan and Hong Kong on their essays for the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), according to a \u003c/span>\u003ca href=\"https://doi.org/10.1080/08957347.2012.635502\">\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">study published in 2012\u003c/span>\u003c/a>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">. That may have been because some Asian students had memorized well-structured paragraphs, while humans easily noticed that the essays were off-topic. (The \u003c/span>\u003ca href=\"https://www.ets.org/erater/about.html\">\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">ETS website\u003c/span>\u003c/a>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\"> says it only relies on the e-rater score alone for practice tests, and uses it in conjunction with human scores for actual exams.) \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">Asian Americans also garnered higher marks from an automated scoring system \u003c/span>\u003ca href=\"https://github.com/NAEP-AS-Challenge/reading-prediction\">\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">created during a coding competition in 2021\u003c/span>\u003c/a>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\"> and powered by BERT, which had been the most advanced algorithm before the current generation of large language models, such as GPT. Computer scientists put their experimental robo-grader through a series of tests and discovered that it \u003c/span>\u003ca href=\"https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-031-11644-5_69\">\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">gave higher scores than humans did to Asian Americans’ open-response answers\u003c/span>\u003c/a>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\"> on a reading comprehension test. \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cspan style=\"font-weight: 400\">It was also unclear why BERT sometimes treated Asian Americans differently. But it illustrates how important it is to test these systems before we unleash them in schools. Based on educator enthusiasm, however, I fear this train has already left the station. In recent webinars, I’ve seen many teachers post in the chat window that they’re already using ChatGPT, Claude and other AI-powered apps to grade writing. That might be a time saver for teachers, but it could also be harming students. \u003c/span>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003c/p>\u003c/div>",
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