Catholic schools say AI cannot duplicate human conscience

Members of the Catholic Educational Association of the Philippines said artificial intelligence cannot duplicate the human conscience as they pushed for the responsible integration of AI into the teaching-learning process.

In a webinar titled “Education 5.0: The Human and Artificial Intelligence Nexus,” around 200 educators examined the shift from Education 4.0’s focus on digitalization and automation to Education 5.0’s stronger emphasis on ethics and humanism. Speakers noted that while AI can assist through automated assessment, intelligent tutoring systems, and learning analytics, it remains morally neutral and limited without human discernment. Human intelligence, though bounded and imperfect, is interpretive, contextual, and guided by conscience—qualities that AI cannot replace.

Participants were reminded that technology must serve the human person, not the other way around. CEAP executive director Marcy Ador Dionisio underscored the urgency of addressing digital inequality, AI governance, academic integrity, and mental health in schools. He emphasized that innovation should not be equated with academic quality and warned that without clear policies, classroom integrity may be compromised. Dionisio also cited growing concerns over reform fatigue, data privacy, and whether educators are adequately prepared for the paradigm shift brought by AI.

CEAP called on its member-schools to craft AI-use policies, strengthen teacher formation, and foster a culture of discernment in technology integration. The group said Catholic schools are tasked with forming learners who are technologically competent, morally grounded, and oriented toward the common good. According to CEAP, Education 5.0 represents an “educational conversion” that puts the human heart at the center of innovation.

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