According to my opinion No, it is unlikely that technology will fully replace teachers in the future. While technology can aid the teaching process, it cannot fully replicate the role of teachers. Teachers play a crucial role in not only imparting knowledge but also inculcating values, being inspirational role models, and providing mentorship, which are aspects that technology cannot fully replicate. Additionally, while technology may replace some aspects of teaching, it also requires teachers to take on new and more sophisticated duties and responsibilities. Therefore, the prevailing view is that technology will complement and empower teachers rather than entirely replace them. AZ-700, HCL-BF-PRO-10, C_TS410_2022, CTSC
I wouldn’t look at this from the teacher’s perspective.
Large Language Models, in particular, are an incredibly valuable tool for students. It provides instant high quality answersa to questions like “Will technology replace teachers in the Future?” — see the answer ChatGPT 4 gave me at the end of this post.
For most students such a high quality answer to the question just isn’t available - you can’t ask a teacher, because unless the question happens to be part of the unit they’re teaching right now they won’t have time to give you an answer this detailed. The student’s best option (before Generative AI) was to try to find an article or book that was specifically written for your question. But even if that exists, it’s likely really difficult to find and there’s a very high probability of failing to find a good article/book.
In reality the only reliable way for a student to get a good answer to any random question is to spend months researching it. And while that certainly should be encouraged… there are only so many things you can research in a life time. And a lot of questions just aren’t worth that much effort.
It’s a shortcut to a reasonably good answer to any question no matter how trivial and it allows students to quickly elevate their understanding on any particular subject to a level where they will have questions that are genuinely difficult for anyone (or any thing) to answer.
Going back to teachers - I think LLMs can replace a subset of the work teachers currently do. But that doesn’t replace teachers at all - it just frees up some of the teacher’s time so they allocate more of it to other parts of their job.