City of Otsu to use AI to analyze past school bullying cases with an eye on future prevention
City of Otsu to use AI to analyze past school bullying
cases with an eye on future prevention
FEB 8, 2019
OTSU, SHIGA PREF. - A city in Shiga Prefecture said
Friday it plans to use artificial intelligence to predict the potential
consequences of suspected cases of bullying at schools, in what would be the
first such analysis by a municipality in the country.
“Through an AI theoretical analysis of past data, we will
be able to properly respond to cases without just relying on teachers’ past
experiences,” Otsu Mayor Naomi Koshi said of the planned analysis, set to begin
from the next fiscal year.
AI will be used to analyze 9,000 suspected bullying cases
reported by elementary and junior high schools in the city over the six years
through fiscal 2018.
It will examine the school grade and gender of the
suspected victims and perpetrators as well as when and where the incidents
occurred.
Statistical analysis of the data is expected to help
local authorities and teachers identify forms of bullying that tend to escalate
in seriousness and which therefore require extra attention, the Otsu board of
education said.
The AI analysis will also look at other factors, such as
school absenteeism and academic achievement, and the findings will be compiled
into a report for use by teachers and in training seminars.
“Bullying may start from low-level friction in
relationships but can get worse day by day. It is important to know which cases
have a tendency to become serious,” an official of the education board said.
The city’s education board came under fire over the
handling of a bullying case involving a 13-year-old junior high school student
who jumped to his death from the condominium building where he lived in 2011.
The board initially found no connection between the
suicide and bullying, but some students were later found to have stated in a
school survey that the boy was told to “practice killing himself.”
An independent committee set up by the Otsu Municipal
Government attributed the suicide to bullying in a report issued in 2013.
The case led Japan to enact a law the same year obliging
schools to set guidelines to prevent bullying. In Otsu, schools are required to
report all possible bullying cases to the city’s education board within 24
hours.
Elementary, junior and senior high schools in Japan
reported more than 410,000 cases of bullying in fiscal 2017. Ten of the 250
students who killed themselves had been bullied at school, according to
education ministry data.
Comments
Post a Comment