口头答复 · 2023-02-06 · 第 14 届国会

学生使用AI技术考试作业

Students Using Artificial Intelligence Technologies for Exams and Assignments

AI 安全与伦理AI 经济与产业AI 与就业AI 与教育 争议度 3 · 实质辩论

议员质询AI技术如ChatGPT对学生作业和考试的影响、作弊问题及教育应对措施。教育部长回应,AI带来机遇与挑战,教育部提供指导资源,鼓励合理利用AI,同时强调基础知识掌握,防止过度依赖和作弊。核心争议在于如何平衡AI辅助学习与防范学术不端。

关键要点

  • AI带来机遇与挑战
  • 提供教师指导资源
  • 防范学生作弊行为
政府立场

支持合理利用AI防止作弊

质询立场

关注AI作弊风险与监管

政策信号

推动AI教育规范与防作弊

"ChatGPT can be a useful tool for learning only when students have mastered basic concepts and thinking skills."

参与人员(6)

完整译文(中文)

Hansard 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期:2026-05-02

19 陈武明医生问教育部长:(a) 是否预计人工智能(AI)技术如ChatGPT会影响学生的课程作业和开卷考试,如果会,影响表现在哪些方面;(b) 由于此类AI的兴起,教育和技能领域存在哪些挑战和机遇;(c) 正在采取哪些措施培养生活技能、软技能及其他能力,以使人类工作者在国际竞争和AI进步的环境中保持竞争力和相关性。

20 万日沙医生问教育部长:(a) 是否有学生在学校和高等院校中利用人工智能聊天机器人ChatGPT作弊的案例;(b) 已采取哪些措施来检测抄袭行为。

21 林伟杰医生问教育部长:(a) 教育部是否在研究国际学生群体中利用人工智能(AI)技术作弊考试和作业的趋势;(b) 本地是否发生过类似情况;(c) 教育部计划如何应对新加坡教育体系中的这一问题;(d) 教育部将如何指导教育者利用AI提升学习效果,同时确保学生不滥用AI技术进行作弊或其他不道德行为。

22 沙希拉·阿卜杜拉医生问教育部长,学校正在采取哪些措施防止人工智能聊天机器人如ChatGPT的潜在滥用。

教育部长(陈振声先生) :议长先生,恳请允许我将第19至22号问题一并回答。

议长 :请讲。

陈振声 :议长先生,议员们询问教育部如何应对学校和高等院校中ChatGPT及类似人工智能技术的使用,特别是如何防止学生滥用ChatGPT。

议长先生,首先我要说的是:像任何技术一样,ChatGPT及类似的生成式AI工具对用户既带来机遇,也带来挑战。既有挑战,也有机遇。

这些技术已经进入我们的生活,并将随着时间推移变得更加普及。因此,教育部为学校和高等院校的教育者提供指导和资源,帮助他们有效利用这些技术提升学习效果。教育者之间也有专业讨论小组,探讨其在教育环境中的应用。

同时,我们的教育者仍将教授学生理解基本概念,并引导学生避免对技术工具产生过度依赖。

例如,就像计算器支持学生学习数学的能力,但这并不替代学生首先掌握基本数学运算的必要性。只有当学生掌握了基本概念和思维技能后,ChatGPT才能成为有用的学习工具。在更加不确定的世界中,我们还必须教导学生接受并学会使用新常态下的工具,这些工具的结果不再像计算器那样确定。这也适用于日益普及的AI工具,它们可能不会仅提供确定性的答案。

我们的教育者还将帮助学生理解像ChatGPT这样的AI工具的工作原理。由于ChatGPT可能根据输入提供不准确或有偏见的输出,学生需要具备辨别能力,批判性地评估其输出的准确性和客观性。

学校和高等院校采取多种措施防止滥用该技术。在日常教学中,学生被教育诚信的重要性以及抄袭的有害影响和后果。此外,教师采用多种评估方式来衡量学生的能力,并检测可能由AI生成的异常答复。

我们的高等院校采用多样化的评估方式,包括考试、演讲和需要分析、实地笔记及观察细节的项目,这些内容不易被AI技术生成。作业中采用多种策略检测抄袭,包括使用技术工具检测AI生成内容。这些方法将随着时间不断演进。

我们的学校培养学生重要技能,如吸收概念并将其应用于新的动态情境、自主和协作学习、创新思维、人际关系管理及跨文化技能。这些技能不易被技术工具替代,且通过领导角色、跨学科项目工作及各种体验式学习获得。

我必须强调,在这个新世界中,学生必须掌握的关键技能是:如何发现、提炼和辨别,并在可能的情况下,在此过程中创造或开发新事物。所有这些努力将在学生进入高等院校后持续进行,高校课程也已加强,帮助学生发展基础数字能力及生活技能,更好地应对工作和成年生活。我们的学校和高等院校将继续装备学生数字能力和价值观,使他们能够自信且负责任地利用技术。

最后,议长先生,为了记录在案,这个回答是由我勤奋的教育部官员提供的,而非ChatGPT。[笑声]

议长 :万日沙医生。

万日沙(惹兰勿刹) :议长,谢谢。我感谢部长分享ChatGPT的利弊。坦白说,当我开始写议会质询时,我担心学生广泛使用ChatGPT会给他们带来不公平优势。但随着我自己广泛使用并测试它对我的论文题目的表现,以及看到它如何被检测出抄袭,我明白教导学生正确使用AI相关工具的重要性。我认为这正是我们应当迎接的浪潮。

我想问部长:教育部是否考虑开设课程,鼓励人们未来在工作中利用AI相关工具?

陈振声 :议长先生,答案是肯定的。事实上,我们已有计划,并且正在为教育者举办课程,帮助他们理解此类AI技术的潜力和挑战。我们在专业社区内设有讨论小组,探讨如何利用这些技术提升教育体系。

同样,我们也希望装备学生掌握负责任使用这些技术的技能。正如我所说,在新世界中,不仅仅是寻找确定性答案,比如计算器中一加一总是等于二。在新世界中,我们需要能够处理多种可能结果并全面考虑。这就是为什么我一直强调,我们这一代人必须学习的新技能是发现、提炼,最终辨别。如果可能,还要在过程中开发或创造新事物。因为我们的价值不在于用过去的答案解决昨天的问题,而是如何提前为明天的挑战创造解决方案。这些是我们必须掌握并帮助学生掌握的新技能。

议长 :林伟杰医生。

林伟杰(森巴旺) :谢谢,先生。我想问部长一个补充问题,关于AI使用的政策,尤其是与作弊相关的规定,现在是否已在所有学校明确说明?学生是否知晓?相关沟通是如何进行的?最后,迄今是否发现任何作弊案例?处罚措施是什么?

陈振声 :议长先生,针对林医生的问题,答案是:作弊就是作弊。我们的教育机构绝不容忍作弊。作弊可能是传统形式,也可能是由新技术促成的新形式。

这始终是我们必须克服的长期挑战。但解决方案有两个方面。第一是如何检测考试、测验中的作弊。这有点像“猫捉老鼠”的游戏,你提升技术,另一方也会尝试创新手段。但这只是技术层面。更重要的是如何教育我们的学生理解并坚守基本价值观,传授他们为何要遵守这些价值观。

学习过程不仅仅是得出答案并提交给老师或考试委员会。更重要的是过程,即如何得出答案。如果某些工具能帮助你得出更好的答案,那很好。但我们期望所有学生如实申报信息来源。即便如此,他们也必须回归我提到的三“D”:发现(discover)、提炼(distil)和辨别(discern)。这点必须保持不变。

英文原文

SPRS Hansard 原始记录 · 抓取日期:2026-05-02

19 Dr Tan Wu Meng asked the Minister for Education (a) whether artificial intelligence (AI) technologies such as ChatGPT are expected to affect student coursework and open-book assessments and, if so, how; (b) what challenges and opportunities exist in the educational and skills landscape due to the rise of such AI; and (c) what is being done to inculcate life skills, soft skills, and other competencies so that human workers can remain competitive and relevant amidst a landscape encompassing international competition and AI advancements.

20 Dr Wan Rizal asked the Minister for Education (a) whether there are cases of cheating among students in schools and Institutes of Higher Learning in relation to the artificial intelligence chatbot ChatGPT; and (b) what measures are put in place to detect plagiarism.

21 Dr Lim Wee Kiak asked the Minister for Education (a) whether the Ministry is studying the trend of the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology among international student bodies to cheat in exams and assignments; (b) whether similar instances have happened locally; (c) how does the Ministry plan to address this issue in Singapore’s education system; and (d) how will the Ministry guide educators to harness the use of AI to enhance learning while ensuring that students do not misuse AI technology for cheating or any other unethical behaviour.

22 Dr Shahira Abdullah asked the Minister for Education what are schools doing to prevent potential abuses of artificial intelligence chatbots such as ChatGPT.

The Minister for Education (Mr Chan Chun Sing) : Mr Speaker, Sir, may I have your permission to take the Question Nos 19 to 22 together, please.

Mr Speaker : Please do.

Mr Chan Chun Sing : Mr Speaker, Sir, Members have asked how the Ministry of Education (MOE) plans to address the use of ChatGPT and similar Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies in schools and Institutes of Higher Learning (IHLs), and in particular, how MOE will prevent students from misusing ChatGPT.

Mr Speaker, let me first say this: as with any technology, ChatGPT and similar generative AI tools present both opportunities and challenges to users. Both challenges and opportunities.

These technologies are in our midst and will become more pervasive over time. Therefore, MOE provides educators in schools and IHLs with guidance and resources to effectively harness it to enhance learning. There are also professional discussion groups amongst our educators to explore its use in the education setting.

At the same time, our educators will still teach students to understand fundamental concepts and guide students against developing an over-reliance on technological tools.

For example, just like how a calculator supports students' capacity for learning mathematics but that does not replace the need for our students to first master basic mathematical operations. ChatGPT can be a useful tool for learning only when students have mastered basic concepts and thinking skills. In a more uncertain world, we must also teach our students to embrace and learn to work with tools in the new normal that have a range of outcomes beyond a deterministic outcome like a calculator. This would extend to AI tools that will increase in pervasiveness and may not provide only deterministic answers.

Our educators will also help students understand how AI tools like ChatGPT work. As ChatGPT can provide inaccurate or biased output depending on its inputs, students need to be discerning and critically assess its output for accuracy and objectivity.

Schools and IHLs adopt a range of practices to guard against misuse of this technology. In their daily work, students are taught the importance of integrity and the harmful impact and consequences of plagiarism. In addition, teachers use multiple modes of assessment to gauge students' proficiency and detect uncharacteristic responses that could be AI-generated content.

Our IHLs have varied modes of assessment including examinations, presentations and projects that require analysis, field notes and observational details that cannot be generated easily by AI technology. A wide variety of strategies are adopted to detect plagiarism in assignments, including technological tools to detect content generated by AI technology. These approaches will necessarily evolve over time.

Our schools equip students with important skills such as assimilating concepts and applying them to new and dynamic situations, self-directed and collaborative learning, inventive thinking, relationship management and cross-cultural skills. These skills are not easily replaced by technological tools and acquired through leadership roles, interdisciplinary project work and various forms of experiential learning.

And I must emphasise this, in this new world, the critical skill for our students to acquire are: how to discover, distil and to discern and if possible, create or develop something new in the process. All these efforts are sustained as students enter our IHLs, where the curriculum has also been enhanced to help students develop baseline digital competencies, as well as life skills to better navigate work and adulthood. Our schools and IHLs will continue to equip students with digital competencies and values to enable them to harness technology confidently and responsibly.

And finally, Mr Speaker, Sir, for the record, this answer has been provided by my hardworking MOE officers and not by ChatGPT. [ Laughter. ]

Mr Speaker : Dr Wan Rizal.

Dr Wan Rizal (Jalan Besar) : Mr Speaker, thank you. I would like to thank the Minister for sharing the positives and negatives of ChatGPT. To be honest, when I started writing the Parliamentary Question (PQ), I was concerned with ChatGPT being used pervasively by students and giving them an advantage. But over time, after using it myself extensively and testing it against my essay questions and seeing how it can be caught for plagiarism, I understand that it is quite important that we teach our students the importance of using AI-related tools. I think that this is the wave that we should embark on.

I would like to ask the Minister: would the Ministry consider having courses that would encourage people to make use of AI-related tools for their work in the future?

Mr Chan Chun Sing : Mr Speaker, Sir. The answer is yes. Indeed, we have a plan and we are already conducting courses for our educators to help them understand both the potential and the challenges of such AI technologies. We have discussion groups within the professional community on how to harness the potential of such technologies for us to improve the education system.

Similarly, we would also like to equip our students with the skillsets to learn how to use this responsibly. Because as I have mentioned, in the new world, it is not just about trying to find a deterministic answer like learning how to use a calculator, where one plus one always equals to two. In the new world, we need to be able to work with a range of possible outcomes and consider them holistically. That is why, I have been emphasising to all my students and teachers that the new skillsets for us in this generation is learning how to discover, to distil and finally, to discern. And if possible, to develop or create something new in the process because our value-add today is not about trying to answer yesterday's problems with yesterday's answer. Our value-add is how to create tomorrow's solutions for tomorrow's challenges ahead of time. These are new skillsets that we must all acquire and help our students to acquire.

Mr Speaker : Dr Lim Wee Kiak.

Dr Lim Wee Kiak (Sembawang) : Thank you, Sir. I would like to ask the Minister one supplementary question regarding whether the policy governing the use of AI, especially in relation to cheating, is very clearly spelled out now for all the schools? And do the students know this as well? In what way has the communication been done? And finally, have any cases been detected so far and what are the penalties?

Mr Chan Chun Sing : Mr Speaker, Sir. The answer to Dr Lim's question is this: cheating is cheating. Cheating is not tolerated in any of our education institutions. Cheating may take the form of conventional cheating or cheating may take new forms, like that enabled by new technologies.

So, this is always an evergreen challenge that we have to overcome. But it requires two parts in the solutioning. The first part is how to detect cheating is our examinations, tests and so forth. And that is, again, a bit like a "cat and mouse" game where if you improve your technologies, the other side may also try to come up with other new and innovation ways. But that is the technical aspect. I think the more important aspect is how we educate our people to understand the fundamental values, hold on to the fundamental values, how we impart them the values such that they understand why they are doing what they are doing.

In the learning process, it is not about coming out with an answer to give the answer and submit it to the teachers or to the examination board. What is more important is also the process of trying to get to the answer and how you derive that answer. And if some tools can help you to derive a better answer, so be it. But we expect all our students to declare, truthfully, where their sources of information may come from. And even then, they must be able to go back to the three "D"s that I mentioned: discover, distil and discern. And that, must not change.