Amazon Offers $100M in Cloud-Computing Credits for Projects Like ‘AI Teaching Assistant’ – Slashdot
This week AWS pledged up to $100 million in cloud-computing credits for educational organizations over the next five years, to help them build “technology-based learning experiences” on AWS, including:
- AI assistants
- coding curriculums
– connectivity tools - student learning platforms
- mobile apps
- chatbots
One example shared by Amazon: The nonprofit Code.org will use AWS’s cloud credits to scale their AI teaching assistant that “has already helped teachers reduce the time they spend assessing students’ coding projects by up to 50%.” (Amazon’s blog post notes that “Improved efficiency means teachers have more time to work on personalized lesson plans and coach students” — and that Code.org’s assistant uses an AWS service for building AI tools…)
$100 million sounds pretty generous. But long-time Slashdot reader theodp notes the application for the cloud credits limits education organization to $100,000 in credits (though “your organization may be able to apply for a credits expansion” if needed). Do these figures suggest Amazon expects less than 1,000 organizations to apply for free cloud-computing over the next five years? ($100,000,000/$100,000 = 1,000)
theodp also spotted a GitHub comment from a Code.org software engineer comparing accuracy for its teaching assistant after a switch from GPT-4 Turbo to Claude. Both before and after the switch, the teaching assistant averaged an accuracy rate of 77%, the comment notes.
I guess that 77% accuracy rate is what Amazon is calling “improved efficiency” that “means teachers have more time to work on personalized lesson plans and coach students.” (Maybe you’re never to young to learn that AI makes mistakes?)