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AI images defame a California elementary school. Now the state is pushing for new protections – The Mercury News

Written by Khari Johnson, CalMatters

In December, fourth-graders at Delevan Drive Elementary School in Los Angeles were given a homework assignment: Write a book report about Pippi Longstocking, and then draw or use artificial intelligence to create a book cover.

When Jody Hughes’ daughter asked Adobe Express Education, the graphic design software provided by her teacher, to produce a picture of “a tall stocking red-headed girl with straight braids,” it produced nothing like the Swedish children’s book character she had accurately described. Instead, using newly installed artificial intelligence, it produces pornographic images of women in underwear and bikinis. Hughes quickly contacted other parents, who said they were able to reproduce similar results on their school-issued Chromebooks. Days later, the parent group Schools Beyond Screens told the LA school board that it opposed the continued use of Adobe’s software.

The incident raised questions not only about the LA school district’s use of a particular AI product but also about the guidelines state administrators are giving schools across California about how to safely embrace the technology. A few weeks after the incident, the country’s Ministry of Education published a new set of guidelines, which had been in the works for several months with the help of a group of 50 teachers, administrators and experts. This review came following instructions from the Legislature, which passed two laws in 2024 telling the department, in effect, to get a handle on the spread of AI among students, teachers and administrators.

Critics wonder if the guidelines would have helped avoid what parents call Pippigate; the debate, they say, provides evidence that districts, schools, and parents, who often lack time or resources to ensure that software tools do not produce a harmful effect, need more support from the government. They add, the guidelines are also very vague in areas and don’t do enough to define the lines of caution for how teachers use AI in the classroom.

The problems in these guidelines call into question whether the department can respond to the instructions of elected officials about how to protect technology that, according to the guidelines itself, can leave children alone and with limited views.



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