Kevin A. Bryan
@afinetheorem.bsky.social
1.6K followers 8 following 510 posts
Assoc Professor of Strategic Management, University of Toronto; Chief Economist, Creative Destruction Lab Toronto; cofounder, AllDayTA; cofounder, NBER Innovation PhD Boot Camp. http://www.kevinbryanecon.com and @AFineTheorem on Twitter
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afinetheorem.bsky.social
PS - 1) Yes, we're building this out even further. Everything a student does, it should be as close as possible to a tutor who knows what you want to teach sitting by their side. 2) And All Day TA also *reports back to you* summaries of these conversations so you know where students went wrong!
afinetheorem.bsky.social
The path forward for higher ed w/ AI is that teaching *complements* AI. Students learn more using AI, and learn *exactly* what we want to teach, instead of just cheating. Can do even better than pre-AI! (And if you want this - alldayta.com, $100 per term. Super easy.)
All Day TA
All Day TA is an AI EdTech company focused on higher education that enables professors to build customized AI teaching assistants for their courses. Available 24/7, it provides students with instant, ...
alldayta.com
afinetheorem.bsky.social
For students, *I don't care* if they get right answers. Why? If wrong, they have to explain to AI what they were thinking before moving on. Cheating doesn't save time b/c I don't grade on correctness, just whether you work through the quiz! Try it here app.alldayta.com/university-o... 3/4
afinetheorem.bsky.social
Toss my lecture audio, slides, handouts into a module. A crazy AI workflow pulls out learning goals. AI then spins up questions (you can approve or not) from your docs plus context on why students might get them wrong. 2/4
afinetheorem.bsky.social
I know it's my company, but All Day TA AI-driven quizzes are so good. Student cheat on all take-home work. How do you get them to learn? Do even better than we used to by having them learn *as they do low-staked hw*. Here's use just this week in a Texas univ course - students really use this. 1/4
afinetheorem.bsky.social
Wasn't sure this particular one was a good fit for the bsky crowd, hah!
afinetheorem.bsky.social
Hah! Yeah, no one really studies "social science", but eg at an engineering crowd talk, I wouldn't bat at eye at an economist or a political scientist saying "as a social scientist, how we should look at this is..." or similar
afinetheorem.bsky.social
A much more common term in the US than Europe. Social Science departments and even high school classes called "social science" are very common over here so that self description wouldn't make anyone bat an eye.
afinetheorem.bsky.social
Syllabus here: kevinbryanecon.com/Bryan-Progre...

Course AI here on AllDayTA (to be updated weekly as we progress, including with AI-driven adaptive quizzes!): app.alldayta.com/university-o... 2/2
kevinbryanecon.com
afinetheorem.bsky.social
New class on Progress starting tomorrow - I'm amped! Trying to put some rigor from economics, economic history, and philosophy on a topic very much in the air. It will be awesome.

(And first class running slides in my all html browser-based slideshow program - details soon!) 1/2
afinetheorem.bsky.social
I cover project setup, version control, my daily very simple workflow, what to use for code (Python or R), what AI is high value, why LaTeX, how to do it easily, why all this matters even for qual projects, and links to exactly what to d/l. My own practices were very sloppy-this is a better way. 2/2
afinetheorem.bsky.social
Perhaps of interest to folks with social science PhD programs: at Rotman, we added an experimental 3 session "tech stack" training in addition to the math boot camp. My lecture was "how to do reproducible, open, quick research", aka version control, LaTeX, AI. 1/2 kevinbryanecon.com/techstack.html
afinetheorem.bsky.social
PS - An awesome dev of ours was testing the featureand told me "I got it wrong on purpose at first for testing, but then forgot to divide by 2 for expected value until the system brought me there!" Exactly. Imagine this help for the student, and then summed up & reported back to you for each hw!
afinetheorem.bsky.social
Honestly, it's a really nice system. As always, everything is all siloed: your content is never used for any training nor leaves your course, and is deleted on demand. The whole alldayta.com is $100 per class section per term - a couple bucks per student on average. AI complements our teaching! 6/6
All Day TA
All Day TA is an AI EdTech company focused on higher education that enables professors to build customized AI teaching assistants for their courses. Available 24/7, it provides students with instant, ...
alldayta.com
afinetheorem.bsky.social
So instead of "here's a hw, half of you go home and cheat, the rest hand it in and get 7/10, and neither you nor the student fully understands what was done wrong", we deter cheating, ensure everyone 'gets enough questions correct' and thinks through incorrect ones, and report back to the prof. 5/6
afinetheorem.bsky.social
When the students do their assignment, and get a question wrong, the AI forces them to explain their logic, then uses your lectures, handouts, and so on to try to correct mistakes. We then use another AI system to report back to you precisely where students have been going wrong *and why*. 4/6
afinetheorem.bsky.social
That's exactly what we built. Our system already interpreted the learning goals of your course, topic by topic. For question banks, we propose these using our AI, and once you edit and approve, we spin up question banks of varying difficulty. You can manually add, edit or kill these, of course. 3/6
afinetheorem.bsky.social
The whole deal with All Day TA is "AI for university classes that is pedagogically-sensible, uses your language, and emphasizes your content only". What does that mean for assignments? Questions at level of your class, covering your learning goals, and giving students feedback the way you would. 2/6
afinetheorem.bsky.social
I know lots of skepticism about AI here, but let me show you something we put out which I think is a huge improvement for university assignments. This is "Intelligent Quiz", a feature on All Day TA (www.alldayta.com). Assignments now have tons of cheating + little feedback to us or the students. 1/9
afinetheorem.bsky.social
(Btw, anedcotes on "the times they are a-changin'", for the student club booths set up on the main drag, the busiest was the Bible Club - I was equally surprised -, second was the Baking Club. The more political booths were very empty...)
afinetheorem.bsky.social
Beautiful Day 1 of school here at U Toronto! Love seeing the students back, and that the undergrads all dress exactly like we did in '98 (I saw 3 Nirvana T-shirts, literally). I'm doing my best to crank up the rigor in my courses - we're taking the role of univs back to '98 also!
afinetheorem.bsky.social
But can get clout by promulgating research consensus in an interesting and accessible way, or by using "PhD" to bluster and stir shit up. A well known Princeton historian used his clout to personally attack me here last year for reasons totally unrelated to his expertise. That's bad for academia.
afinetheorem.bsky.social
For sure, and that around medicine is much older (BC is a North American center of not getting kids vaccinated - crunchy types plus conservative immigrants, not MAGA).
afinetheorem.bsky.social
Definitely some of this but also many of the "influencers" were just very prominent people in the field, who made the mistake of chasing social media clout at the cost of careful rigorous analysis. Agree that there is a demand problem: people liked the clout chasing!
afinetheorem.bsky.social
Yeah for sure. The mRNA situation really seems like an RFK specific issue. There is no general argument that mRNA researchers are not doing useful science, either in Congress or worldwide, no? But I think it would be easier to educate the public if trust in universities overall was higher.