White House Releases New AI National Frameworks, Educator Recommendations

By Alexandra Kelley, Staff Correspondent MAY 23, 2023 02:45 PM  
https://www.nextgov.com/emerging-tech/2023/05/white-house-releases-new-ai-national-frameworks-educator-recommendations/386691/
Photo: The Biden administration unveiled a docket full of more artificial 
intelligence regulatory efforts to promote responsible development, adoption 
and usage of increasingly smart systems.


The White House launched a series of new executive initiatives on fostering a 
culture of responsible artificial intelligence technology usage and practice 
within the U.S. on Tuesday, featuring a national strategic R&D plan and 
education objectives.

Following previous national frameworks, the three new announcements from the 
Biden administration act as guidelines to help codify responsible and effective 
AI algorithm usage, development and deployment, absent federal law.

“The federal government plays a critical role in this effort, including through 
smart investments in research and development (R&D) that promote responsible 
innovation and advance solutions to the challenges that other sectors will not 
address on their own,” the strategic plan executive summary reads.

Among the three announcements include a new roadmap of priority R&D areas in 
the AI sector for federal investments, a public request for information on how 
the federal government can best mitigate AI system risk, and an analysis 
documenting benefits and risks to AI technologies in education.

The R&D Strategic Plan, developed by the White House Office of Science and 
Technology Policy, is composed of several pillars to invest in safe-by-design 
AI systems that can be implemented in a social context.

Those pillars include prioritizing long-term investments in responsible AI; 
developing methods for enhanced human-AI collaboration and understanding; 
thoroughly compiling a definitive list of ethical, legal and societal risks and 
benefits to AI system deployment; developing shared public datasets for broad 
AI algorithmic training; evaluating the needs of an AI-savvy workforce; 
expanding public and private sector partnerships; and establishing 
international collaborations on AI research efforts.

“The federal government plays a critical role in ensuring that technologies 
like AI are developed responsibly, and to serve the American people,” the 
plan’s fact sheet reads.

“Federal investments over many decades have facilitated many key discoveries in 
AI innovations that power industry and society today, and federally funded 
research has sustained progress in AI throughout the field’s evolution.”

Complimenting the R&D plan are new insights into how new AI technologies can 
impact classroom learning and the broader educational system.

Authored by leadership in the Department of Education, the report recommends 
ways educators can leverage AI-powered systems––namely exam monitoring, writing 
assistance and voice recognition devices––to their benefit, while mitigating 
potential risks.

Countering bias and data exposure in these systems was a paramount discussion 
point, leading regulators to broadly recommend all future education policies 
dealing with AI at a federal, state and local level keep user needs, feedback 
and empowerment in mind.

“As protections are developed, we recommend that policies center people, not 
machines,” the recommendations read.

“Teachers, learners and others need to retain their agency to decide what 
patterns mean and to choose courses of action.”

DOE leadership also reiterated that AI technologies should not displace 
teachers.

“Some teachers worry that they may be replaced—to the contrary, the Department 
firmly rejects the idea that AI could replace teachers,” the recommendation 
states.

The final AI announcement requests public input on a new National AI Strategy.

The forthcoming guidance aims to build on existing Biden-Harris administration 
actions surrounding AI and machine learning to further chart the nation's 
course into a safe and integrated future with AI technologies.


“By developing a National AI Strategy, the federal government will provide a 
whole-of-society approach to AI,” the RFI background says.

“The strategy will pay particular attention to recent and projected advances in 
AI, to make sure that the United States is responsive to the latest 
opportunities and challenges posed by AI, as well as the global changes that 
will arrive in the coming years.”

Comments from the public will be accepted until July 7, 2023.

Some of the questions officials ask discuss best oversight practices of AI 
technologies, how AI language models can maintain secure software designs, how 
AI can strengthen civil rights and how AI can better identify digital 
vulnerabilities in critical infrastructures’ digital networks.

These comments reflect the broad goals of a forthcoming National AI Strategy 
that seeks to incorporate AI systems into a broad array of societal 
institutions, while simultaneously controlling for common risks.

On top of releasing new plans for more national AI technology oversight, the 
Biden administration will host a conversation with American workers today to 
hear concerns over automation and its broader economic impact.

AI regulation has been a chief talking point across the federal government 
following the breakthrough prevalence of generative AI systems such as ChatGPT, 
as a lack of sweeping regulations haunt the continued innovation in the AI/ML 
field.

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