Current:Home > MarketsOpinion: High schoolers can do what AI can't -FutureWise Finance
Opinion: High schoolers can do what AI can't
View
Date:2025-04-15 06:26:56
"The Worthington Christian [[WINNING_TEAM_MASCOT]] defeated the Westerville North [[LOSING_TEAM_MASCOT]] 2-1 in an Ohio boys soccer game on Saturday."
That's according to a story that ran last month in The Columbus Dispatch. Go WINNING_TEAM_MASCOTS!
That scintillating lede was written not by a sportswriter, but an artificial intelligence tool. Gannett Newspapers, which owns the Dispatch, says it has since paused its use of AI to write about high school sports.
A Gannett spokesperson said, "(We) are experimenting with automation and AI to build tools for our journalists and add content for our readers..."
Many news organizations, including divisions of NPR, are examining how AI might be used in their work. But if Gannett has begun their AI "experimenting" with high school sports because they believe they are less momentous than war, peace, climate change, the economy, Beyoncé , and politics, they may miss something crucial.
Nothing may be more important to the students who play high school soccer, basketball, football, volleyball, and baseball, and to their families, neighborhoods, and sometimes, whole towns.
That next game is what the students train for, work toward, and dream about. Someday, almost all student athletes will go on to have jobs in front of screens, in office parks, at schools, hospitals or construction sites. They'll have mortgages and children, suffer break-ups and health scares. But the high school games they played and watched, their hopes and cheers, will stay vibrant in their memories.
I have a small idea. If newspapers will no longer send staff reporters to cover high school games, why not hire high school student journalists?
News organizations can pay students an hourly wage to cover high school games. The young reporters might learn how to be fair to all sides, write vividly, and engage readers. That's what the lyrical sports columns of Red Barber, Wendell Smith, Frank DeFord, and Sally Jenkins did, and do. And think of the great writers who have been inspired by sports: Hemingway on fishing, Bernard Malamud and Marianne Moore on baseball, Joyce Carol Oates on boxing, George Plimpton on almost all sports, and CLR James, the West Indian historian who wrote once of cricket, "There can be raw pain and bleeding, where so many thousands see the inevitable ups and downs of only a game."
A good high school writer, unlike a bot, could tell readers not just the score, but the stories of the game.
veryGood! (8492)
Related
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Immigration judges union, a frequent critic, is told to get approval before speaking publicly
- Dormitory fire forces 60 students into temporary housing at Central Connecticut State University
- EAGLEEYE COIN: Application of Blockchain Technology in Supply Chain Management
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Thousands watch as bald eagle parents squabble over whose turn it is to keep eggs warm
- New satellite will 'name and shame' large-scale polluters, by tracking methane gas emissions
- Being a female runner shouldn't be dangerous. Laken Riley's death reminds us it is.
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Regulatory costs account for half of the price of new condos in Hawaii, university report finds
Ranking
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- EAGLEEYE COIN: Cryptocurrency Market Historical Bull Market Review
- Kansas continues sliding in latest Bracketology predicting the men's NCAA Tournament field
- Luann de Lesseps and Mary-Kate Olsen's Ex Olivier Sarkozy Grab Lunch in NYC
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- The 2024 Oscars' best original song nominees, cruelly ranked
- Regulatory costs account for half of the price of new condos in Hawaii, university report finds
- After years in conflict zones, a war reporter reckons with a deadly cancer diagnosis
Recommendation
Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
In North Carolina, primary voters choosing candidates to succeed term-limited Gov. Roy Cooper
TLC's Chilli is officially a grandmother to a baby girl
A list of mass killings in the United States this year
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
2024 Oscar Guide: International Feature
Hollowed Out
'Effective immediately': University of Maryland frats, sororities suspended amid hazing probe