
与AI为伴的风险:孩子可能正向机器“学做人”
青少年已在接触AI陪伴者,而孩子年龄越小,发展偏离的风险就越大。我们需要设计以人为中心的AI,保护我们建立联结、相互协作和理解他人的能力——正是这些塑造了人性。
Todd Grindal, EdD, is the President of SRI Education. Grindal provides strategic leadership across a wide range of research, evaluation, and technical assistance initiatives designed to inform education policy and practice. He has led projects for the U.S. Department of Education, the Administration for Children and Families, and through state-level partnerships in Arkansas, Virginia, Massachusetts, and Montana. His work bridges policy and practice, with a focus on methodological rigor, early childhood and special education, and the application of emerging technologies to persistent educational challenges.
Grindal’s work is grounded in close collaboration with policymakers, practitioners, and community partners to design studies that are relevant, actionable, and methodologically sound. He has led initiatives examining efforts to improve instructional coaching, reduce exclusionary discipline, expand access to inclusive education, and understand how systems and families navigate early childhood programs. He brings deep expertise in experimental and quasi-experimental methods, survey design, and policy analysis, and has contributed to cross-disciplinary innovations at the intersection of education, artificial intelligence, and digital media.
Grindal has authored numerous peer-reviewed publications and regularly presents his work at scholarly conferences. He co-edited a special issue of Early Childhood Research Quarterly on Latino families’ access to early education and has received national recognition for methodological contributions, including the Applied Research Award for Advances in Methodology from the American Educational Research Association and the Journal Article of the Year award from the Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness. He has also been an invited speaker at the United Nations.
From 2021 to 2024, Grindal taught a graduate course on special education policy and practice at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, where he mentored future educators and policy leaders. In addition to his research and teaching, he serves in professional advisory roles, including with the National Center for Learning Disabilities and the Child Care and Early Education Policy Research Consortium.
He earned his doctorate from the Harvard Graduate School of Education, where he was a Julius B. Richmond Fellow. Earlier in his career, he worked as an elementary and preschool teacher and school administrator.
青少年已在接触AI陪伴者,而孩子年龄越小,发展偏离的风险就越大。我们需要设计以人为中心的AI,保护我们建立联结、相互协作和理解他人的能力——正是这些塑造了人性。
1930年、ウィンスロップ・ケロッグ教授とその妻、ルエラは、長男ドナルドを授かりました。我が子の誕生は同教授に、長年抱えていた疑問を検証する機会をもたらしました。チンパンジーを人間のように育てれば、ホモサピエンスの親戚として匹敵する能力を発達させられるのでしょうか。そこで同教授は、息子のドナルドとチンパンジーを一緒に育てることにしたのです。
A century-old experiment on human development may provide clues about the developmental risks that lie ahead as AI interacts with younger children.
