MDDI 演讲稿 · 2025-11-05

政务部长 Rahayu Mahzam 在 EDUTech Asia 2025 上的演讲

政务部长 Rahayu Mahzam 在 EDUTech Asia 2025 上的演讲

Rahayu Mahzam · MDDI 政务次长 · EDUTech Asia

要点

  • 新加坡学生学习空间(SLS)自2018年起覆盖小学至大学预科全体学生,已整合人工智能功能,包括语音评估、学习反馈助手及可个性化学习路径的自适应学习系统。
  • OpenAI数据显示,新加坡ChatGPT人均使用率全球第一,约四分之一的新加坡人每周使用该工具。
  • 智慧国教育者奖学金(Smart Nation Educator Fellowship)面向教师领导层与专科教师,通过实践体验与课堂项目提升其AI应用信心,发挥乘数效应推动全校AI教育落地。
  • 编程乐趣(Code for Fun)计划新增「AI趣玩」模块,让学生亲手体验生成式AI的创作应用,同时学习识别幻觉和偏见等局限性。
  • 教育部制定「AI融入教育(AIEd)伦理框架」,确立自主性、包容性、公平性与安全性四项原则,指导新加坡学校以负责任的方式将AI工具运用于教学。
  • 政府科技局开发了MinorBench安全基准,用于评估AI聊天机器人拒绝儿童不安全或不当查询的能力,为面向未成年人的AI部署提供安全保障。

完整译文(中文)

MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期: 2026-06-21

简介

尊贵的来宾们,

大家早上好。

感谢邀请我出席一年一度的 EDUTech Asia。

核心信息一:AI 已重新定义学习,可作为推动向善的力量。

我们正步入一个新时代,当今的数字生态与十年前相比已截然不同。AI 从根本上改变了我们获取和处理信息的方式,重塑了我们学习的方式。在驾驭这场技术革命的过程中,我们必须思考如何善用 AI 的强大能力,将其作为推动向善的力量,确保 AI 以惠及所有人的有意义方式提升教育质量。

以芬兰为例。芬兰致力于引领教育可持续数字化的发展方向,即确保数字工具和环境的设计能够满足个人需求,同时保障教育的可及性与平等性。在芬兰的课堂上,AI 驱动的系统——如智能辅导系统(ITS)——通过提供实时反馈与支持、充当全天候在线的虚拟导师,在补充传统教学方法方面发挥着至关重要的作用。学生可与这些系统互动,就难点概念寻求帮助、练习解题,并即时获得作业反馈。教师也可轻松借助 AI 识别学生表现中的关键优势与薄弱环节,从而制定有针对性的教学策略。

我们对 AI 教育应用的愿景必须清晰:AI 不会取代教师,而是将重新定义并强化教师的角色。我们看到教师正从内容传递者演变为学习引导者,借助 AI 工具更好地理解并激发每位学生的潜能。这一转变需要教育工作者、管理者和 EdTech 提供者之间进行深思熟虑的规划与协作,以确保 AI 真正服务于学习。

在新加坡,我们一直紧跟技术发展步伐,以促进教与学。自2018年起,新加坡学生学习空间(Singapore Student Learning Space,简称 SLS)持续以符合教学法的方式,为从小学到大学预科各阶段的所有学生提供涵盖各学科、与课程挂钩的优质资源,确保平等获取。SLS 不断演进,以满足课堂的需求,包括开发各类 AI 赋能功能。部分 AI 赋能功能包括:AI 语音评估、协助教师批改作业并向学生提供反馈的学习反馈助手,以及根据不同学习特征个性化定制学习路径的自适应学习系统。

这正是充分发挥 AI 潜力以支持和提升学习的体现——也是我们所追求并必须践行的目标。

事实上,我们的年轻一代接触技术的程度远超在座许多人。我曾听到教师表达担忧:我们的孩子作为数字原住民,可能已对 AI 过度依赖,将其视为万能的快速解决方案,犹如"神灯精灵",随时都有答案。这些担忧不无道理。我们的孩子和青少年需要审慎地使用这些工具,不是用来取代批判性思维,而是用来强化它。当他们学会核实 AI 回应的真实性、比较不同 AI 生成的观点,并识别何时 AI 的局限性需要人类判断时,他们的批判性思维能力便得到了锻炼。然而,当学生将 AI 作为捷径,要求其全权代写文章或完成作业时,结果只是千篇一律、毫无特色的输出,这绕过了学习所必需的有益挣扎过程。

技术的使用必须有益于学生的学习,且须与学生的年龄和发展阶段相适应。使用技术的决策必须首先以学生的发展、教学法和学习需求为中心。同样,要发挥 AI 在教育中的潜力,其使用必须符合目的,并与明确的学习目标相一致。若缺乏有意为之的整合,则存在对 AI 工具过度依赖的风险,可能削弱批判性思维、问题解决和分析推理等核心技能的发展——而这些技能对有效学习至关重要。如此一来,AI 便从拐杖转变为催化剂:学生带着自己的想法,借助 AI 迭代、审视并完善思维。

实现 AI 的审慎整合,需要教师具备自信、熟练地有效运用这些工具的能力。这正是我们通过"智慧国家教育者奖学金"(Smart Nation Educator Fellowship)提升教师驾驭 AI 信心的原因所在。该项目主要面向引领新加坡教学群体的教师领导者和专家,为他们提供通过动手体验探索新兴技术可能性的机会,并聆听业界和教育界重要演讲者就 AI 对未来劳动力技能影响及 AI 伦理等议题进行的分享。教师参与项目并将其付诸课堂实践,这将形成倍增效应,推动 AI 在学校的有效应用。

当审慎使用时,AI 是一种赋能工具,能够放大人类潜能,帮助各年龄段的学习者在数字世界中成为问题解决者和贡献者。

核心信息二:数字包容是我们作为一个国家携手前进、强化社会契约的关键所在。我们必须为所有人提供接触 AI 的机会,帮助他们培养运用 AI 的能力。

作为一个国家,许多新加坡人已将 AI 融入日常生活。

事实上,OpenAI 的数据显示,新加坡的 ChatGPT 人均使用量全球最高——约四分之一的新加坡人每周使用一次。

但即便大多数公民已在使用 AI,部分群体仍可能需要支持,以跟上数字化进步的步伐并提升数字技能。数字包容始终是我们"智慧国家"征程的核心,我们致力于确保每位公民都具备借助技术促进学习、工作和生活的能力与信心。

目前,SG60 的旗舰活动"心与灵体验展"(Heart & Soul Experience)正在乌节图书馆(Orchard Library)举行。该展览由 MDDI 和 NLB 联合主办,访客可探索并体验生成式 AI(Gen AI)技术,感受过去与未来的交汇。

访客可在"Call Me in the Future"展台与 Gen AI 驱动的未来自己展开对话,提问范围从未来如何"霸位"(chope)餐桌,到未来学校和教育机构的面貌,包罗万象。

「时光旅行者」(Time Traveller)是一个照相亭,借助国家档案馆的历史照片,让访客看到自己被 AI 生成置于新加坡历史地标场景中的形象。这两项体验均为访客提供了友好亲切的 Gen AI 入门体验。「时光旅行者」照相亭尤为巧妙——它通过轻松幽默的 AI 失误花絮,展示 AI 的局限性,让学习充满乐趣。

「心与灵体验展」展示了我们持续致力于为新加坡人提供定期发现和了解新技术机会的承诺。事实上,今年的展览在此前 GenAI 实验所积累的宝贵洞见和用户反馈基础上进一步深化,包括 NLB 的 StoryGen 和 ChatBook 原型,体现了我们为理解新加坡人对新技术的关切与兴趣所做的持续努力。通过这些引人入胜的体验,我们旨在激发各年龄层市民的好奇心与求知欲,同时将他们与过去、现在、未来相连结,更重要的是,将彼此相连结。

在学校,学生们通过"AI for Fun"这一 Code for Fun 项目下的新模块,进行动手探索,初步体验 AI 的魅力。

例如,来自水道小学(Waterway Primary School)的 Anya 学会了利用生成式 AI 创作附有配图的儿童故事书。

与此同时,来自北地中学(Northland Secondary School)的 Dharmadevan 利用生成式 AI 为微控制器编写程序,为老年人提供服药的视觉提醒。

这些年轻的学习者不只是技术的被动消费者,他们是创造者,在教师和培训者的引导下,了解 AI 的无限可能与潜在风险。学生们发现 AI 可能会产生幻觉或反映不公平的偏见,从而学会了核实 AI 生成内容这一关键技能。

在学校批判性 AI 素养教育的基础上,"数字为生"(Digital for Life,DfL)运动等社区合作项目也确保这些学习机会惠及所有学生,包括那些需要额外支持以充分参与我们数字未来的学生。

例如,With Kita(前身为 Hatch Youth Services)于2025年启动了一个项目,通过其 Gen AI 项目提升残障人士(PwDs)和有特殊教育需求(SEN)学生的数字素养,推动利用 Gen AI 进行内容创作技能的发展。项目中的学生培养出数字共同创作者的身份认同,以表达自己的想法,并积极以创作者和协作者的身份参与数字空间。

核心信息三:每个人都责无旁贷,共同确保我们的下一代得到良好支持,以安全、负责任的方式使用 AI。

随着我们与 AI 的接触日益频繁,我们需要确保建立相应机制,支持 AI 的安全、负责任使用,尤其是为下一代提供保障。

父母在引导孩子使用科技与人工智能方面扮演着重要角色,我们希望为他们提供支持。

家长可访问 IMDA 的"数字生活"(Digital for Life,DfL)在线平台,该平台提供一系列简短资源,帮助家长更好地了解人工智能在日常生活中日益增长的影响。这些资源包括指南和工具包,部分专为青少年开发,介绍人工智能运作的核心概念,重点说明潜在风险(如人工智能生成的虚假信息、深度伪造或偏见),以及如何安全使用人工智能。家长可借助这些资源,在家中与子女就网络安全展开有益的对话。这些资源也有助于家长保持数字素养,使他们能够在不断演变的人工智能环境中更好地引导子女。

通过 NLB 的 S.U.R.E.(Source、Understand、Research、Evaluate)计划,家长也可以学习批判性信息评估技能,学会如何在当今数字环境中应对海量人工智能生成的信息。NLB 还为学校提供定制支持,例如面向学校的 S.U.R.E. 计划,帮助小学、中学、大学先修班及初级学院的学生建立基本的信息素养技能。

为确保人工智能在学校中得到有意义的应用,教育部(MOE)制定了《人工智能教育(AIEd)伦理框架》,以指导学校安全、负责任且有意义地将人工智能工具用于教学。该框架围绕新加坡教育中人工智能应用的四项原则:主体性(Agency)、包容性(Inclusivity)、公平性(Fairness)与安全性(Safety)。教师获得了 AIEd 伦理入门读本、随用随学的生成式人工智能简明快速指南等资源,以帮助他们引导学生安全、合乎伦理地使用人工智能。学校也获得了相关资源,以促进校内专业交流,探讨人工智能的益处与潜在风险,以及如何减轻这些风险。

在罗思小学(Rosyth School),学生在使用 SLS 上的人工智能自适应学习系统之前,需完成一个介绍性模块,了解人工智能的使用方式及其伦理注意事项,以确保学生安全、全面地使用人工智能。

科技公司在营造安全的数字环境方面也发挥着重要作用,尤其是为我们的下一代。各平台被鼓励默认提供适合儿童的设置,包括限制搜索结果、设置私密个人资料以及限制儿童的内容分享功能。

针对人工智能应用,GovTech 开发了 MinorBench——一项安全基准测试工具,帮助我们测试人工智能聊天机器人并评估其对儿童的安全程度。其中一个测试示例,是评估人工智能聊天机器人拒绝儿童提出不安全或不当查询的能力。

如果您有兴趣了解科技公司在教育领域的工作,据我所知,三星电子新加坡(Samsung Electronics Singapore)明天将进行演讲,分享他们在数字学习环境中支持教育工作者和学校的努力。

结语

通过人民、公共和私营部门各方合作伙伴在人工智能教育与数字素养方面的多管齐下,我们正在做好准备,负责任地发挥人工智能的潜力。在迈入这一新篇章之际,让我们将人工智能视为一股向善的力量,而非令人畏惧的存在。

人工智能的真正力量不在于技术本身,而在于我们如何使用它。作为教育科技倡导者的群体,让我们继续探索新方法,赋能每一位教育工作者,提升每一位学习者,并使每一位新加坡人都具备在数字未来中蓬勃发展的信心、技能与判断力。

祝您在本次会议中收获满满的启发。

谢谢。

英文原文

MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期: 2026-06-21

Introduction

Distinguished Guests,

Good morning.

Thank you for inviting me to the annual EDUTech Asia.

Key message 1: AI has redefined learning and can be used as a force for good.

We are entering a new era where our digital landscape is vastly different than a decade ago. AI has fundamentally transformed how we access and process information, reshaping the way we learn. As we navigate this technological revolution, it is crucial to consider how we can harness AI’s powerful capabilities to use it as a force for good, to ensure AI enhances education in meaningful ways that benefit everyone.

Take for example, Finland. Finland has set out to be a lead in the sustainable digitalisation of education. This means to ensure that digital tools and environments are designed to meet individual needs while ensuring accessibility and equality in education. In Finland’s classrooms, AI-powered systems like intelligent tutoring systems (ITS) play a crucial role in supplementing traditional teaching methods by providing real-time feedback and support, acting as virtual tutors that are available around the clock. Students can interact with these systems to get help with difficult concepts, practice problem-solving, and receive immediate feedback on their work. Teachers easily use AI to identify key strengths and weaknesses in student performance and allow for targeted instructional strategies.

Our vision for AI in education must be clear: AI will not replace teachers but will redefine and enhance their roles. We see teachers evolving from content deliverers to learning facilitators, empowered by AI tools to better understand and unlock each student's potential. This transformation requires thoughtful planning and collaboration between educators, leaders, and EdTech providers to ensure AI truly serves learning.

In Singapore, we have been keeping pace with evolving technology to enable teaching and learning. Since 2018, the Singapore Student Learning Space, or SLS for short, has been providing all students from primary to pre-university levels with equal access to quality, curriculum-aligned resources across subjects in a pedagogically-sound manner. SLS has continually evolved to meet the needs and demands of the classroom including developing AI-enabled features. Some of these AI-enabled features include the use of AI in Speech Evaluation, Learning Feedback Assistants to support teachers in marking and providing feedback to students, as well as the Adaptive Learning System to personalise learning pathways that cater to students with diverse learning profiles.

This leverages AI for its potential to support and enhance learning, which is what we aspire to do and need to do.

The truth is our younger generations are exposed to tech more than many of us seated here. I have heard teachers express concerns that our children, as digital natives, may have become too dependent on AI and reach for it like a quick fix, a kind of “Genie in a lamp” that always has an answer. These are valid worries. Our children and youth need to use these tools thoughtfully, not to replace their critical thinking, but to strengthen it. Their critical thinking skills are strengthened when they learn to fact-check AI responses, compare different AI-generated viewpoints, and recognise when AI limitations require human judgement. However, when students use AI as a shortcut, asking it to write essays or complete assignments wholesale, the result is generic and bland output that bypasses the productive struggle essential to learning.

The use of technology must benefit students’ learning and must be age- and development-appropriate. Decisions to use technology must first and foremost be centred on students’ development, pedagogy and learning needs. Likewise, to harness the potential of AI in education, its use must be fit-for-purpose and aligned with clear learning objectives. Without intentional integration, there is a risk of overreliance on AI tools, potentially undermining the development of essential skills such as critical thinking, problem-solving, and analytical reasoning that remain fundamental to effective learning. This then transforms AI from crutch to catalyst, where students bring their own ideas and use AI to iterate, critique and refine their thinking.

Achieving this thoughtful integration of AI requires teachers who are confident and skilled in using these tools effectively. This is why we are building our teachers’ confidence to master AI through the Smart Nation Educator Fellowship. Targeted primarily at our Teacher Leaders and Specialists who lead the teaching fraternity in Singapore, this programme provides opportunities for them to explore possibilities with emerging technologies through hands-on introductory experiences and hear from key industry and educational speakers on topics like AI’s impact on the future of workforce skills and AI ethics. Teachers work on projects and implement it in the classrooms, and this serves as a force multiplier to catalyse the effective use of AI in schools.

When used thoughtfully, AI is an enabler and can amplify human potential and help learners across all ages become a problem-solver and a contributor in a digital world.

Key message 2: Digital inclusion is a key part of us moving forward together as a nation and strengthening our social compact. We must provide the exposure opportunities for all to encounter AI and develop their proficiency to use it.

As a nation, many of us Singaporeans are already embracing AI in our lives.

In fact, data from OpenAI showed that Singapore has the highest per capita ChatGPT usage globally – about one in four of us use it weekly.

But even as majority of our citizens are already using AI, segments of the population may still require support to keep pace with digital advancements and develop their digital skills. Digital inclusion remains at the heart of our Smart Nation journey, and we are committed to ensure that every citizen has the means and confidence to harness technology for learning, work, and life.

Right now, SG60’s flagship event, the Heart & Soul Experience showcase is running at Orchard Library. Jointly organised by MDDI and NLB, visitors can explore and experiment with Generative AI (Gen AI) technology to experience both the past and the future.

Visitors can have a Gen AI-powered chat with their future selves in the “Call Me in the Future” booths, asking questions that can range from how we ‘chope’ our tables in the future, to what our schools and education institutions might look like.

Time Traveller is a photo booth that allows visitors to see themselves visually generated at Singapore’s historical locations based on photos from the National Archives. Both experiences give visitors a friendly introduction to Gen AI. The Time Traveller photo booth is especially clever — it shows people AI's limitations through light-hearted bloopers that make learning enjoyable.

The Heart & Soul Experience showcase reflects our ongoing commitment to ensure that Singaporeans have regular opportunities to discover and learn about new technologies. In fact, this year's exhibition builds upon the valuable insights and user feedback gathered from our previous GenAI experiments, including NLB’s StoryGen and ChatBook prototypes demonstrating our continuous effort to understand Singaporeans' concerns and interests regarding new technology. Through these engaging experiences, we aim to spark curiosity and learning for citizens of all ages, whilst connecting them to the past, present, future and most importantly, to each other.

In schools, students are getting their first taste of AI through hands-on exploration via “AI for Fun”, a new module under the Code for Fun programme.

For example, Anya from Waterway Primary School learnt to use Generative AI to create a children's storybook with accompanying images.

Meanwhile, Dharmadevan from Northland Secondary School used Generative AI to build up the program for a microcontroller to provide a visual reminder to the elderly to take their medication.

These young learners are not just passive consumers of technology. They are creators, guided by teachers and trainers who help them understand both the exciting possibilities and the pitfalls of AI. Students discover that AI can hallucinate or reflect unfair biases, hence learning the crucial skill of fact-checking AI-generated responses.

Building on this foundation of critical AI literacy in schools, community partnerships like the Digital for Life (DfL) Movement also ensure these learning opportunities extend to all students, including those who need additional support to participate fully in our digital future.

For example, With Kita, formerly known as Hatch Youth Services, started a project in 2025 to advance digital literacy among Persons with Disabilities (PwDs) and students with special educational needs (SEN) through its Gen AI programme which promotes the development of skills in content creation utilising Gen AI. Students in the programme foster a digital co-creator identity to express their ideas, and actively engage as creators and collaborators in the digital space.

Key message 3: Everyone has a part to play to ensure that our next generation is well supported to use AI in a safe and responsible way.

As we are increasingly exposed to AI, we need to ensure that we have systems in place to support its safe and responsible use, especially for our next generation.

Parents play an important role in guiding children in the use of technology and AI and we want to support them in doing so.

Parents can visit IMDA’s Digital for Life (DfL) online portal which provides an array of bite-sized resources to better understand the growing influence of AI in everyday life. These include guides and toolkits, some developed specifically for youths, which introduce key concepts of how AI works, highlight potential risks e.g. AI-generated misinformation, deepfakes or bias, and how to use AI safely. Parents can draw on these resources to encourage thoughtful conversations on online safety with their child at home. These resources also help parents to stay digitally savvy, and equip them to better guide their children in an evolving AI landscape.

Through NLB’s S.U.R.E. (Source, Understand, Research, Evaluate) programme, parents can also learn critical information evaluation skills on how to navigate the increasing volume of AI-generated information in today’s digital landscape. NLB also provides tailored support for schools, such as S.U.R.E for Schools helping Primary, Secondary, Pre-University and Junior College students build essential information literacy skills.

To ensure meaningful use of AI in schools, MOE developed the “AI-in-education (AIEd) Ethics Framework”, to guide schools in using AI tools safely, responsibly and meaningfully for teaching and learning. The framework outlines four principles of Agency, Inclusivity, Fairness and Safety in the use of AI in Singapore’s Education. Teachers are provided with resources like an AIEd Ethics Primer, just-in-time bite-sized Quick Guides to Generative AI, to help them with guiding their students on safe and ethical AI use. Schools are also provided resources to facilitate professional conversations in schools on topics such as the benefits and potential risks of AI, and how these risks can be mitigated.

At Rosyth School, before using the AI-enabled Adaptive Learning System on SLS, students undergo an introductory module on how AI can be used and its ethical considerations, to ensure students use AI safely and holistically.

Tech companies also play a role in creating a safe environment in the digital realm, especially for our next generation. Platforms are encouraged to provide child-friendly settings by default, including restricted search results, private profiles and limited sharing capabilities for children.

Specific to AI applications, GovTech has developed MinorBench, a safety benchmark that has helped us in testing AI chatbots and assessing how safe they are for children. One example includes looking into the ability of AI chatbots to refuse unsafe or inappropriate queries from children.

If you are interested in learning about tech companies work in education, I understand that Samsung Electronics Singapore will be presenting tomorrow. They'll share their efforts to support educators and schools in digital learning environments.

Conclusion

Through this multi-pronged approach to AI education and digital literacy by partners across the people, public and private sectors, we are preparing ourselves to harness AI's potential responsibly. As we enter this new chapter, let us see AI not as a force to be feared, but as a force for good.

The true power of AI lies not in the technology itself, but in how we use it. As a community of EdTech advocates, let us continue to seek out new ways to empower every educator, uplift every learner, and equip every Singaporean with the confidence, skills, and discernment to thrive in a digital future.

I wish you an inspiring time at the conference.

Thank you.