口頭答覆 · 2024-01-09 · 屆國會 14
學生AI素養髮展措施
議員質詢教育部關於除新加坡學生學習空間AI工具外,如何提升學生AI基礎素養,包括AI程式設計課程的計劃及實施主體。教育部長回應,教育部通過課程融合、師資培訓及校外專案如AI學生推廣計劃,推動學生理解AI及其倫理,強調網路健康教育防範AI風險。核心爭議在於如何有效提升學生AI技能及擴大專案參與度。
關鍵要點
- • 推廣AI基礎知識
- • 師資培訓與資源支援
- • AI學生推廣計劃
推動AI教育,強化師資與課程
加強AI素養與安全教育
“MOE develops students’ foundational knowledge of AI and promotes its safe and responsible use.”
參與人員 (7)
完整譯文(中文)
Hansard 原始記錄 · 2026-05-02
3 翁華漢先生問教育部長:(a) 除了新加坡學生學習空間上的人工智慧(AI)輔助工具外,還將實施哪些其他專案以培養學生的基礎AI素養;(b) 是否有計劃在課程中推出AI程式設計專案;(c) 如果有,此類專案計劃何時推出;(d) 這些專案將由教師還是第三方服務提供者負責執行。
4 翁華漢先生問教育部長:(a) 有多少學生申請加入人工智慧學生推廣計劃;(b) 申請者中分別來自(i) 中學 (ii) 理工學院 (iii) 綜合課程學校和 (iv) 初級學院的比例是多少;(c) 是否有計劃提高該計劃的參與率。
教育部長(陳振聲先生)答:議長先生,懇請允許我將翁華漢先生在今日議程上的第3和第4號問題,與稍後會議中戴維樂先生和拉茲瓦娜·貝古姆副教授的議會提問一併答覆。
議長:可以。
陳振聲部長:議長先生,閣下,議員們關心教育部如何計劃準備我們的學生、教師和勞動力安全且負責任地使用人工智慧(AI),並應對潛在風險,如資料洩露、濫用及通過AI系統傳播假新聞。
教育部認識到AI將在職場和日常生活中日益普及。為準備學生和勞動力,教育部培養學生的AI基礎知識,並在學校及高等院校(IHLs)推廣其安全和負責任的使用。學校和高等院校的教育者獲得指導、資源和培訓,以有效利用AI提升學習效果。
學生在學習不同學科過程中,獲得相關數字素養,如理解AI、其用途和侷限性,以及倫理考量。學生還有機會通過校本專案,如課外活動、應用學習專案(ALPs)和拓展課程,進一步學習,這些課程可能由教師、行業合作伙伴和服務提供者授課。
一個例子是由AI新加坡舉辦的AI學生推廣計劃。2023年,近17,000名學生申請加入該計劃,申請者構成如下:(a) 11% 來自理工學院;(b) 52% 來自中學;(c) 11% 來自綜合課程學校;(d) 3% 來自初級學院。來自自治大學和工藝教育學院的學生佔剩餘23%。
除了AI知識,學校和高等院校還採取措施防範AI風險。在學校,學生學習網路健康技能,包括評估資訊和識別假新聞(包括通過AI系統傳播的假新聞)、理解資料安全、隱私和負責任的網路行為。教師還引導學生使用AI支援學習,強調與資料和AI使用相關的倫理,如誠信和妥善處理資料的重要性。
高等院校也在特定領域整合AI工具的使用,確保學生理解AI帶來的風險,如可能助長錯誤資訊。他們還設有治理框架,確保AI的倫理和負責任使用。
在學校和高等院校之外,在職成人可參加與AI相關的SkillsFuture課程,成為各自行業中智慧且安全的AI使用者。
議長先生,若獲允許,請允許我舉一些我們學校和高等院校實際應用AI和教授AI的例子。
淡濱尼小學的教師教學生使用名為Stable Diffusion的生成式AI影像生成工具,作為學校科學、技術、工程和數學(STEM)應用學習專案中學習可持續發展概念的一部分。在教師指導下,學生學習如何編寫提示詞,評估提示詞的有效性,並調整提示詞以提升生成影像質量,同時製作一本倡導可持續發展的電子書。
另一個例子:蒙福特中學的學生通過STEM應用學習專案學習AI。學生學習基本的AI應用,如影像識別、聊天機器人和使用自然語言處理的智慧助手。學生基於這些知識,在設計與技術科目中進一步應用,設計產品,如受區塊鏈啟發的智慧儲蓄應用,跟蹤消費習慣並自動存款。
還有一個例子:培才中學在設計與技術及營養與食品科學等課程中使用生成式AI工具。設計與技術教師指導學生使用ChatGPT和Vizcom等生成式AI工具,激發產品新創意,提升繪圖、視覺化和構思原型解決方案的能力。元慶中學的學生也使用AI為營養與食品科學專案生成創意。在兩校,學生被教導通過與其他可靠資訊源核實,評估AI生成內容的可信度,並在報告中註明AI工具及其他來源的使用,幫助他們以倫理方式使用AI。
在更高層次,安德森實龍崗初級學院與AI新加坡合作,向學生介紹AI基礎學習。通過聯合舉辦的“為AI職業革命做準備”活動,學生了解AI及其應用案例,並與行業領袖對話。安德森實龍崗初級學院還開發了資訊通訊技術(ICT)冠軍計劃,提升有興趣學生的數字素養和技能。
此外,我們還通過新加坡學生學習空間(SLS)提供了一個AI驅動的自適應學習系統(ALS)用於數學,自2023年起覆蓋小學五年級主題,未來兩年將逐步推出更多主題。
聖希爾達小學的教師引導學生使用定製推薦資源進行自主學習,或探索不同子主題。羅賽斯學校的學生在使用ALS前,會接受關於AI使用及其倫理考量的入門模組,確保學生安全且全面地使用AI。
淡濱尼理工學院室內建築與設計文憑課程教授學生使用AI工具輔助設計過程,如使用ChatGPT生成設計陳述,使用Midjourney生成參考影像。
新加坡科技設計大學的設計與人工智慧課程使學生掌握AI技術專長和設計創新技能。核心領域包括演算法、設計中的AI應用和應用深度學習。通過掌握這些領域的能力,畢業生可應用AI驅動設計,推動經濟轉型並改善生活。
議長先生,閣下,這些是我們根據適齡水平在學校中應用和教授AI的多個例子。
議長:翁華漢先生。
翁華漢先生(提名議員):感謝陳部長的回答。我有一個追加問題。我瞭解到SLS為學生提供了一個課外自主學習的課程庫。教育部是否考慮在LEAPS 2.0框架下,或以其他方式,認可學生完成所有自學課程的承諾?
陳振聲部長:議長先生,閣下,感謝翁先生的建議。我想與議會成員分享,SLS中有不同型別的模組。有些是核心課程或學校課程的一部分,學生可以訪問並幫助他們自主安排學習進度。SLS中也有校外課程或其他學校提供的模組,學生可在自己的時間學習課外內容。我們鼓勵學生這樣做,因為我們希望他們養成主動學習和掌控自己學習的習慣,希望這些習慣不僅在校內,也貫穿他們一生。
我們會考慮翁先生的建議。
議長:賈瑞爾·賈姆先生。
賈瑞爾·賈姆彥松先生(亞歷山大區):閣下,我注意到部長分享了學校如何在教學中使用生成式AI,教育部對生成式AI用於評分作業和提交的立場是否有變化?
其次,學校是否專門教授所有學生如何提示生成式AI模型,因為這正快速成為職場關鍵技能?
陳振聲部長:議長先生,閣下,簡短回答是,這取決於我們給予學生的接觸層級。剛才舉的例子中,例如小學階段,很多做法是為了讓學生接觸,學習如何成為智慧使用者。
我們不一定在所有層級都用於評估。但舉個例子,在更高層次,淡濱尼理工學院的課程中,學生將生成式AI作為課程作業的一部分。結合室內設計課程,學生很快發現兩點。
第一,利用AI,他們可以更快地完善設計——可能只需以前一半的時間。第二,也是非常重要的,是如何提升提示詞的精準度,正如議員所說,提示詞的質量決定了整個過程的方向。如果提示詞不佳,雖然速度快,但可能走錯路。
這就是我們所說的適齡課程。不同層級的學生學習使用AI的能力和複雜度不同。
議長:施金麗女士。
施金麗女士(提名議員):謝謝。我有一個追加問題。關於AI準備度,部長提到學校為學生準備AI相關工作技能。我想了解教育部與通訊及資訊部(MCI)在幫助學生準備AI相關工作方面的銜接如何?
第二個方面是倫理。對於高等院校學生,進入職場後,不僅要能勝任工作,還要塑造工作的開展方式。我認為AI倫理存在許多灰色地帶。我們打算為高等院校學生引入何種教育路徑,幫助他們更好地準備未來AI相關崗位?
陳振聲部長:議長先生,閣下,針對施女士的意見,我有幾點回應。首先,我們當然同意學習使用AI很重要,但更重要的是學習倫理使用AI。教育部始終將AI技術使用與倫理使用結合起來,這非常重要。
這不僅僅是告知或承認使用了這些工具,更重要的是瞭解程式或AI演算法的潛在缺陷和偏見。畢竟,它是演算法,可能帶來偏差。
我們非常謹慎對待這點。我們並非從高等院校開始。例如,我訪問學校時,教師鼓勵學生用AI工具幫助寫作文,但重點不是作文本身。寫完後,教師要求學生了解AI資訊來源,批判AI產物,理解其優缺點及潛在偏見。
通過這些例子,我們讓學生學會倫理使用AI。
第二點是我們如何準備學生迎接AI時代。分兩部分。
第一,確保大眾成為智慧使用者,懂得如何使用、倫理使用和智慧使用AI。
第二,培養成為演算法開發者的專業人才。這更復雜。我們認為,數學、邏輯思維、計算技能等基礎能力對學生進入相關職業非常重要。我們可能不直接教授AI或程式設計,但這些基礎技能是關鍵。
即使在最近的國際學生評估專案(PISA)中,我們很高興學生在邏輯思維和計算思維方面表現良好。因為在資訊氾濫的AI時代,我們鼓勵學生掌握三項能力:提煉、辨別和發現。
為什麼是這三項?
提煉:世界資訊氾濫,如何提煉出相關有用資訊是第一步。
辨別:提煉後要賦予價值,辨別能力帶來價值。
發現:更重要的是,學生和未來工作者必須能創造新價值。
在今天和未來,沒有人會因重複舊知識而獲獎。正如我常說,“回答昨天的問題用昨天的答案毫無意義”。我們要準備學生提前用明天的解決方案應對未來挑戰。這就是發現能力,與自主學習緊密相關,讓學生掌控知識。
這些是我們為AI時代準備學生的重要技能,我們也與通訊及資訊部緊密合作,建設課程和知識庫。
議長:陳武銘醫生。
陳武銘醫生(裕廊區):感謝部長的回答。去年總統施政報告辯論時,我談及AI時代及新加坡如何生存。我很高興教育部認真關注並推動教育系統中的AI。我有兩個追加問題。
首先,我見過裕廊區家長,他們對AI前景感到興奮,但也擔憂不平等問題,比如部分家庭擁有更好IT接入、機會和培訓。部長能否保證他所述機會在不同社會經濟背景家庭的學生中均等可得?
第二,部分裕廊家長擔心AI時代的媒體素養。最近總理本人提及深度偽造影片風險。我們是否教育年輕一代警惕深度偽造、被欺騙風險及深度偽造技術被不道德濫用的風險?
陳振聲部長:議長先生,閣下,我先答第二個問題。簡短回答是肯定的。我們關注錯誤資訊問題,包括深度偽造,這在所有學校和高等院校都是持續討論的話題。我認為這不僅是學校和高等院校的問題。
實際上,全社會都應關注如何區分真偽、是非。這是共同努力,教育部無法單獨完成。我們會與所有利益相關者合作,確保向學生和社群傳遞正確、適當的資訊,使大家在過程中更明智,不被誤導或成為他人錯誤資訊的傳播者。這很重要。
關於第一個問題,即接入不平等,我們正努力實現普及化。我們非常清楚部分家庭過去可能無法獲得某些材料。讓我舉兩個例子說明我們如何做到並持續努力。
首先是SLS。過去,一些家長可能資源更多,會購買更多學習材料和練習冊給孩子。
但今天,我鼓勵大家檢視SLS。如果您的孩子正處於上學年齡,您會發現SLS中有一個完整的各種材料的資源庫。SLS中提供了最好的教學資源。您的孩子不僅僅需要登入完成老師佈置的作業,他或她還可以登入做許多老師沒有佈置的其他事情。最近,我上傳了一個影片來說明這一點,因為一位中三學生Kairos向我展示了他如何在學校假期期間通過訪問SLS上的模組——順便說一句,這些都是免費的——自主掌控自己的學習進度。
所以,這就是我們如何實現對我們系統內所有最佳材料的民主化訪問的一種方式。它幫助我們的人民節省時間;也讓每個人都能獲得類似的材料。
我們實現民主化訪問的另一個例子是,我們確保即使是來自較貧困家庭背景的學生也不會被落下。這是我們如何克服COVID-19期間這類學生潛在學習損失的生動例證。
當COVID-19期間學校關閉時,我們做了兩件事。
首先,我們確保即使學生不來學校,他們也能獲得筆記型電腦、平板電腦和計算機,以便他們在家學習,我們甚至確保他們有足夠的頻寬支援這些裝置的執行。當然,除此之外,對於那些無法在家進行學習的學生,我們甚至開放學校,讓他們繼續在學校學習。
因此,我們的教師實際上同時執行兩套系統,即線上訪問和離線回校訪問。這是教育部的承諾,確保通過技術的使用,我們不會產生數字鴻溝,而是利用技術實現所有學生對最佳材料的民主化訪問。
議長先生:Tan博士,稍後本次會議中,我們確實有一項關於建設安全包容數字社會的動議。最後一個追加問題,Razwana副教授。
Razwana Begum Abdul Rahim副教授(提名議員):感謝部長分享確保人工智慧倫理和負責任使用的各項舉措。鑑於假新聞和錯誤資訊的危險及其對公共安全的影響,教育部是否考慮在各部委之間採用一個全面框架,教育家長和學生,尤其是年幼兒童,關於數字公民身份的概念?
議長先生:Chan部長,我希望您能簡短回答。
陳振聲部長:答案是肯定的,我們正與信息通信媒體發展局(MCI)及其他部委密切合作開展這項工作。但我必須說,這不僅是教育部或信息通信媒體發展局的持續挑戰,而是全社會的挑戰。關鍵在於我們是否能擁有可信的資訊來源,這關係到我們民主制度的核心。如果我們無法信任所獲取的資訊,就無法進行理性的辯論、選舉等。因此,我認為這需要全國的共同努力,教育部和信息通信媒體發展局肯定會與所有利益相關者密切合作,制定議員所建議的框架。
英文原文
SPRS Hansard · Fetched: 2026-05-02
3 Mr Ong Hua Han asked the Minister for Education (a) what other programmes beyond the artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled tools on Singapore Student Learning Space will be put in place to develop baseline AI literacy of students; (b) whether there are plans to launch AI coding programmes in the curriculum; (c) if so, when will such programmes be targeted to be launched; and (d) whether such programmes will be run by teachers or third party service providers.
4 Mr Ong Hua Han asked the Minister for Education (a) how many students have applied to join the Artificial Intelligence Student Outreach Programme; (b) what is the respective percentage of applicants who are from (i) secondary schools (ii) polytechnics (iii) Integrated Programme schools and (iv) junior colleges; and (c) whether there are plans to increase the take-up rate of the programme.
The Minister for Education (Mr Chan Chun Sing) : Mr Speaker, may I have your permission to take Question Nos 3 and 4 on today’s Order Paper by Mr Ong Hua Han, together with the Parliamentary Questions from Mr Patrick Tay 1 and Assoc Prof Razwana Begum 2 scheduled for a subsequent Sitting?
Mr Speaker : Yes, you may.
Mr Chan Chun Sing : Mr Speaker, Sir, Members have asked how the Ministry of Education (MOE) plans to prepare our students, teachers and the workforce on the safe and responsible use of artificial intelligence (AI) and address potential risks, such as data breaches, misuse and fake news spread through AI systems.
MOE recognises that AI will become increasingly pervasive in the workplace and in our daily lives. To prepare our students and workforce, MOE develops students’ foundational knowledge of AI and promotes its safe and responsible use in schools and at the Institutes of Higher Learning (IHLs). Educators in schools and IHLs are provided with guidance, resources and training to effectively harness it to enhance learning.
Students acquire relevant digital literacies, such as understanding AI, its uses and limitations, and ethical considerations in the course of learning different subjects. Students also have opportunities to further their learning through school-based programmes, such as co-curricular activities, Applied Learning Programmes (ALPs) and enrichment programmes, which may be taught by teachers, industry partners and service providers.
One example is the AI Student Outreach Programme conducted by AI Singapore. In 2023, close to 17,000 students applied to join the programme, with the breakdown of applicants as follows: (a) 11% from the polytechnics; (b) 52% from the secondary schools; (c) 11% from the IP schools; and (d) 3% from the junior colleges. Students from the autonomous universities and the Institute of Technical Education make up the remaining 23% of applicants.
Besides knowledge of AI, schools and IHLs have measures to guard against the risks of AI. In schools, students are taught cyber wellness skills, which include evaluating information and identifying fake news including those transmitted through AI systems, understanding data security, privacy and responsible online behaviours. Teachers also guide students to use AI to support their learning, emphasising ethics related to the use of data and AI, such as the importance of integrity and proper data handling.
The IHLs also incorporate the use of AI tools in specific domains to ensure students understand the risks that AI poses, such as the potential to perpetuate misinformation. They also have governance frameworks to ensure the ethical and responsible use of AI.
Beyond our schools and IHLs, working adults can take up AI-related SkillsFuture courses to become smart and secure users of AI in their respective industries.
Mr Speaker, Sir, if I have your permission, let me illustrate this with some real examples of what is happening in our schools and IHLs.
Teachers at Temasek Primary School taught students to use an AI tool called Stable Diffusion, which is a generative AI image-generator, when learning about sustainability concepts as part of the school's science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) ALP. Guided by their teachers, students learn how to write prompts, evaluate the effectiveness of their prompts and adjust them to improve the quality of the generated images as they create an e-book to advocate sustainability.
Another example: students at Montfort Secondary School learn AI through their STEM ALP. Students learn the basic AI applications, such as image recognition, chatbots and smart assistants that use natural language processing. Students build on this knowledge and further apply it in the Design and Technology subject to design products, such as a blockchain-inspired smart savings application that tracks spending habits and automates money deposits.
Yet another example: at Peirce Secondary School, they use generative AI tools in coursework subjects like Design and Technology, and Nutrition and Food Science. Design and Technology teachers guide their students to use generative AI tools like ChatGPT and Vizcom to generate new ideas for their products, develop their ability to sketch, visualise and imagine solutions for their prototypes. At Yuan Ching Secondary School, students also use AI to generate ideas for their Nutrition and Food Science projects. In both schools, students are taught to evaluate the credibility of AI-generated content by corroborating it with other reliable information sources. Students are also taught to acknowledge the use of AI tools and other sources in their reports. This helps them to use AI ethically.
At a higher level, Anderson Serangoon Junior College partnered AI Singapore to introduce students to foundational learning in AI. Through a jointly organised event, "Prepping for an AI career revolution", students learn about AI and its use cases and engage in a dialogue with industry leaders. Anderson Serangoon Junior College also developed the infocomms technology (ICT) Champions Programme to enhance digital literacy and skills amongst interested students.
At another level, we also use an AI-enabled adaptive learning system (ALS) for mathematics that has been made available through our Singapore Student Learning Space (SLS) for Primary 5-level topics since 2023, with more topics to be progressively rolled out in the next two years.
At St Hilda's Primary School, teachers guide students to use customised recommended resources for self-learning or embark on a different lesson if they wish to explore a different sub-topic. At Rosyth School, before using the ALS, students undergo an introductory module on how AI can be used and its ethical considerations to ensure students use AI safely and holistically.
At Temasek Polytechnic's Diploma in Interior Architecture and Design, students are taught to use AI tools to aid them in the design process, such as using ChatGPT to generate design statements and Midjourney to generate reference images.
Singapore University of Technology and Design's Design and Artificial Intelligence Programme equips our students with technical expertise in AI and design innovation skills. Core domains covered include algorithms, AI applications in design and applied deep learning. Through acquiring such competencies in the various domains, graduates can apply AI-driven designs to transform the economy and improve lives.
Mr Speaker, Sir, these are various examples where we apply AI and teach AI in our schools according to the age-appropriate level.
Mr Speaker : Mr Ong Hua Han.
Mr Ong Hua Han (Nominated Member) : I thank Minister Chan for his answer. I have one supplementary question. I understand that the SLS holds a repository of lessons for our students to engage with at their own pace, outside curriculum hours. Could MOE consider recognising a student's commitment to completing all the self-paced lessons, perhaps under the LEAPS 2.0 framework for secondary school students or in some other way?
Mr Chan Chun Sing : Mr Speaker, Sir, we thank Mr Ong for the suggestion. I would like to share with Members of the House that in the SLS, there are different types of modules. There are modules that are part of the core curriculum – or part of the school curriculum – which the students can access and help them to pace their own learning. Within the SLS, there are also modules that are outside the school curriculum or available in other schools, which the students can access at their own time to learn about things beyond the curriculum. We encourage the students to do so because we would like our students to develop the habit of initiating their own learning and taking charge of their own learning. Hopefully, these habits apply to them not just within the school premises, but also, throughout their lives.
We will take into account Mr Ong's suggestion.
Mr Speaker : Mr Gerald Giam.
Mr Gerald Giam Yean Song (Aljunied) : Sir, I note that the Minister shared how schools are using generative AI in the instruction of their students, has there been any change in the stance of MOE on the use of generative AI for graded schoolwork and assignment submissions?
Secondly, do schools specifically teach all students on how to prompt generative AI models, since this is fast becoming a key skill for the workplace?
Mr Chan Chun Sing : Mr Speaker, Sir, the short answer is that it depends on which level of exposure we give to the students. In the various examples I have highlighted just now, for example, at the primary school level, many of the things that we do are for exposure purposes, for the students to learn how to be a smart user.
We do not necessarily use it for assessment at all levels. But if I may give an example, at a higher level, the module at Temasek Polytechnic which they demonstrated to me, the students used generative AI as part of their coursework. When they use the generative AI coupled with the interior design course, what they figure out very quickly are two things.
First, with AI, they can refine the designs very quickly – using, perhaps, half the time that they used to, using the previous method. But the second thing that they have also learnt and very importantly, is how to sharpen – as the Member said – the prompt required in order to start the whole process. If the prompts are not well-crafted, then, you could be doing things very fast, but not necessarily down the correct path.
This is what we mean by age-appropriate lessons. At a certain level, you can apply AI and sharpen the skills necessary at that level. Different students at different levels learn to use AI at different levels of competencies and sophistication.
Mr Speaker : Ms Jean See.
Ms See Jinli Jean (Nominated Member) : Thank you. I have a supplementary question. Relating to AI readiness, the Minister mentioned about schools preparing students for AI type of work skills. I just wanted to understand, what is the bridging with the Ministry of Communications and Information (MCI), in terms of getting students ready for the AI-type of work?
The second area would be in terms of ethics. For those in IHLs, when they enter the workforce, it is not just about being able to do the job, but it is also about how we shape the work that is carried out. I think there is quite a number of grey areas in terms of AI ethics. What would be the type of education pathways that we intend to introduce to IHL students to help them to better prepare for AI-types of job roles in the future?
Mr Chan Chun Sing : Mr Speaker, Sir, let me make a few points in response to Ms Jean See's comments. First, we certainly agree that learning to use AI is important, but learning to use AI ethically is even more important. For us, from MOE's position, we will always couple the learning of the technical use of AI with the ethical use of AI. To us, that is very important.
This goes beyond just about giving credit to or informing people that you have used these tools. But more importantly, to know the downsides that the program or the AI algorithm – after all, it is an algorithm – may bring and some of the biases that may happen in the course of using that.
This is something that we are very careful about. We do not start this at the IHL level. For example, in one of my visits to the schools, the teachers encouraged their students to use an AI tool to help them craft an essay. But it is not about the essay that is most important. After they crafted the essay, the teachers wanted the students to: first, know the sources of information that the AI draws upon; then, the teachers encouraged the students to critique the AI product so that they can understand the upside and the downside of the product and also, the potential biases that that algorithm has generated.
So, it is through such examples that we allow our students to learn to use AI ethically.
My second part of the comments relates to how we are preparing our students for an AI-enabled world. There are two sub-parts to this.
First, at the broader level, it is making sure that our people are smart users – they know how to use this. That is easier done – how to use it, how to use it ethically and how to use it intelligently.
The other part is how to prepare our people to be the coders, the people to work on such algorithms. That is a bit more sophisticated. For that, our belief is that there are certain fundamentals that are important to equip our students across the board for them to get into careers in this track. For example, the importance of mathematics, logical thinking, computational skills – these are very important. So, we may not teach AI or we may not teach coding specifically. But behind coding, there are certain foundational skills that are very important.
Even in the recent Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) results, we are glad that our students have done well in terms of their ability to think logically and to exhibit traits of computational thinking. Because ultimately, in this AI-enabled world where there is an overflow of information, three words come to mind when we encourage our students to use AI.
First, the ability to distil, discern and to discover. Why these three?
Distil: because the world will be flooded with information. How to distil the information into what is relevant and useful to us, is the first important step.
Discern: because, having done that, it must come with value. Discernment comes with value. So, it is important to distil and discern.
But, very importantly, our students and our workers, in time to come, must be able to discover, which means to create new value propositions.
In today and tomorrow's world, none of us will be rewarded by regurgitating old knowledge or what I usually say, "No point answering yesterday's questions with yesterday's answers". What we need, is to prepare our students to answer tomorrow's questions and challenges with tomorrow's solutions ahead of time. That is where the discovery comes in and that ties in with the emphasis on self-initiated learning so that you take control of the mastery of the content that we want our students to have.
So, these are important skills for us to prepare our students for the AI-enabled world and we are working closely with MCI on the technical part to build up the repository of courses and knowledge for our students.
Mr Speaker : Dr Tan Wu Meng.
Dr Tan Wu Meng (Jurong) : I thank the Minister for his answer. Last year, during the debate on the President's Address, I spoke on the age of AI and how Singapore needs to survive in it. I am glad that MOE is taking a serious look and making a serious push regarding AI in our education system. I have got two supplementary questions for the Minister.
Firstly, I have met Clementi parents who are excited by the prospects of AI but also the concerns about the implications for inequality and what happens when some households have better information technology (IT) access, IT opportunities and training opportunities than others. Can the Minister assure us that the opportunities he described in his answer are evenly available for students across households of diverse social economic backgrounds? That is my first question.
The second question is that there are also Clementi parents worried about media literacy in the age of AI. Recently, the Prime Minister, himself, mentioned the risk of deepfake videos. Are we educating our younger generation to be mindful of deepfakes, the risk of being tricked as well as the risk of deepfake technology being abused against peers in unethical ways?
Mr Chan Chun Sing : Mr Speaker, Sir, let me take the second supplementary question first. The short answer is yes. We are concerned about the issue of misinformation – including deepfakes – and this is an ongoing topic of conversation in all our schools and IHLs. I think it is not just about schools and IHLs.
Actually, across our whole society, we should be equally concerned about this: how to distinguish truth from fake news, right from wrong. So, this is a concerted effort and MOE cannot do this alone. We will certainly partner all the stakeholders to make sure that we can share the right information – appropriate information – with our students and also the community, so that we all become more informed in the process without being misinformed by others or being proxies for other people's misinformation. That is important.
On the first supplementary question on inequality of access, it is precisely what we have been trying to do, which is to democratise the access. We are very keenly aware that some families may not have access to some of the materials in the past. But let me just give two examples of how we have done this and continue to do this.
First, is the SLS. In the past, some parents might have more resources and then they go and buy more resource materials for their children to read and worksheets to work on and so forth.
But today, I encourage everyone to check the SLS. If you have children who are in the school-going ages, you will find that within the SLS, there is an entire repository of all kinds of materials. The best teaching resources are available in the SLS. And your child does not need to just log on to do the homework that is being assigned by his or her teacher. He or she can also log on and do many other things that the teachers did not assign them. Recently, I put up a video to illustrate this because a Secondary 3 student, Kairos, demonstrated to me how he took charge of his own learning during the school holidays by accessing the modules on SLS – these are all free of charge, by the way – to learn at his own pace.
So, this is one way we democratise the access to all the best materials available across our own system. It helps our people to save time; it also allows everyone to have the access to similar materials.
Another example of how we have done this to democratise the access is that we make sure that even students from poorer family backgrounds do not get left out. It is the vivid example of how we have overcome a potential learning loss among such students during COVID-19.
When schools were closed during COVID-19, we did two things.
First, we made sure that even if the students do not come to school, they have access to laptops, tablets and computers so that they can learn at home and we even made sure that they have access to the bandwidth necessary to support the working of this laptop. And, of course, on top of that, for students who are unable to do such things at home, we even opened up the schools to allow them to continue their learning in schools.
So, our teachers actually run two systems in parallel whereby we have online access and also offline, back-in-the-school access. This is MOE's commitment to make sure that, through the use of technology, we do not end up with a digital divide but, instead, we use technology to democratise the access to the best material available to all students.
Mr Speaker : Dr Tan, later in this Sitting, we do have a Motion to talk about Building a Safe and Inclusive Digital Society. Last supplementary question, Assoc Prof Razwana.
Assoc Prof Razwana Begum Abdul Rahim (Nominated Member) : I thank the Minister for sharing the various initiatives to ensure ethical and responsible use of AI. Considering the danger of fake news and misinformation and the impact on public safety and security, would the Ministry consider adopting a comprehensive framework across Ministries to educate both parents and students, especially the younger children, on the concept of digital citizenship?
Mr Speaker : Minister Chan, I hope it is a short answer.
Mr Chan Chun Sing : The answer is yes, we are working closely with MCI and other Ministries to do this. But I must say that this is an ongoing challenge not just for MOE or MCI; but it is a whole-of-society challenge. At the crux of it is whether we can have trusted sources of information, which goes to the core of our democratic system. We cannot have reasoned debate, elections and so forth, if we cannot trust the information that we are accessing. So, I think this requires a whole-of-nation effort and, definitely, MOE and MCI will be working closely with all our stakeholders to develop the framework that the Member suggested.