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ChaCha and the Nature of Knowledge

September 2nd, 2008 jonmott Leave a comment Go to comments

The text “answers” service ChaCha invites user to “simply ask your question like you are talking to a smart friend and ChaCha’s advanced technology instantly routes it to the most knowledgeable person on that topic in our Guide community. Your answer is then returned to your phone as a text message within a few minutes.”

I tried a few questions to see how it works. Here are the results:

Q: What is a confidence interval?
A: A group of continuous or discrete adjacent values is used to estimate a statistical parameter (as a mean or variance)

Q: When was the French Revolution?
A: A major transformation of the society and political system of France, the French Revolution lasted from 1789 to 1799.

Q: How does photosynthesis work?
A: Photosynthesis is the process by which green plants convert carbon dioxide to sugar and oxygen using sunlight for energy.

Q: Who wrote the Book of Mormon? (Thought I’d try a difficult one.)
A: No one can say with certainty who wrote it, or which author wrote which portions. There were too many contributors.

The answers are surprisingly cogent. Where do they come from? According to the site, live “ChaCha Guides” are behind the answers:

ChaCha’s Guides are individuals who are part of a vibrant community dedicated to helping people by sharing their knowledge. To become a ChaCha Guide, you must pass a series of tests that verify that you are a good fit with our Guide community. You are then able to go through ChaCha’s Search University and simulation process to become certified as a live ChaCha Guide. This unique approach aims to ensure that only knowledgeable people who have an interest in sharing their knowledge with others are part of ChaCha’s Guide community. ChaCha’s technology is also learning from each answer that is provided by our guides so that we can deliver accurate answers as quickly as possible

It’s unclear to me if the Guides are volunteers or if they are paid. In any case, this service raises interesting questions about the nature of knowledge. When I first heard of ChaCha and did some investigation, I was primarily concerned that students might use such a service to cheat on exams, quizzes and even homework. And I remain concerned that a student might surreptitiously use a cell phone in his or her pocket to “look up” answers on a test.

But this got me thinking about the nature of knowledge and the importance of recall. If a student can (almost) instantaneously get answers to factual questions, how important is it for us to require them to memorize facts? ChaCha will certainly not be the last or most sophisticated tool that provides just-in-time answers to knowledge questions.  As educators and learning technologists, our challenge is to figure out how to make assessment more meaningful and authentic in a world in which rapidly accessing facts is a trivial matter. When anyone can access any bit of knowledge anywhere, anytime, the real premium will increasingly be knowing what to do with that knowledge. Memorization will increasingly give way to analysis, synthesis and the creation of knew knowledge.

Plus cha-cha change . . .

  • My brother worked with inventor/entrepreneur Scott Jones at Purdue while he was developing ChaCha. (Scott's is the guy who invented voicemail.) The ChaCha system uses expeditors (who rephrase questions so they are more succinct), transcribers, and guides.

    As of August 2008, expeditors received $.03 per question, transcribers received $.04 to transcribe a message, guides received $.10 for each answer and those ranked as "top guides" received $.20 per answer (per Wikipedia).
  • A real ChaCha guide
    Hello! While I was out reading the latest about ChaCha, I came across your blog and thought I would provide a couple of answers for you. Yes, we guides at ChaCha are real people! However, there are "canned" answers for frequently asked questions, though as a guide I would have no idea how many that includes. As for homework, yes, the kids are asking for answers. Everyone approaches these differently. For many of us, trig is not our forte' and thus the answers may or may not be correct in the first place. While we may specialize in some areas, we don't get to choose which questions we get, and we certainly do not have unlimited knowledge (and searching for something you have no idea about can be difficult, especially with math for many of us). While I try to answer the questions, I do so while trying to be a bit evasive, too--I'd rather they learn what they are supposed to be learning. All in all, if they get the wrong answers and answer wrong on an assignment, I figure they'll go back to the old-fashioned way--studying! Cheers! Do you have any questions for ChaCha? :)
  • A real ChaCha guide
    Oops...didn't answer your one question...guides are paid, not volunteers.
  • I've been asking the UVU distance ed guys that same question. Their take is very similar to your last paragraph (by the way, I think you typed "knew" instead of "new"), in that quizzes can't be rote regurgitation anymore. John Krutsch in particular is big on the idea of writing his quizzes with the assumption that students have live access to Google while taking the quiz. Is the goal of education to prepare students for their future environment? If it is, then it's a pretty good bet that they'll be constantly connected. Quizzing and testing with that in mind puts a bit more effort on the teacher, but is probably better overall.

    On the other hand, I do think there is some merit to memorization -- and more than just happens during the natural process of life. I'm actually kind of proud of some things that got forced into my head, like that the French Revolution happened in 1789, and that the capital of Vermont is Montpelier. Lame examples, I know, but I was on the spot. Anyway, especially early on I think a lot of the learning process is memorization.

    The ChaCha-related question is how much of that memorization is memorizing data values and how much is memorizing experiences and processes. Do you memorize 5 * 5 = 25 or do you memorize the multiplication process? Some of both, actually. Is there value in recognizing December 7, 1941, April 6, 1830, etc? Maybe I'm just fighting the current, but I think there's value in keeping some pieces of data in local storage instead of on the cloud.

    By the way, ChaCha's answers seem suspiciously canned to me... Maybe a blend of live help and keyword lookup? Maybe they said that and I just missed it or something...
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