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Metaphorical perceptions of secondary school students regarding the concept of generative artificial intelligence.

Key Takeaway

UNLABELLED: The rapid integration of generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) tools, such as ChatGPT, into educational contexts has raised important questions regarding how adolescents conceptualize and make sense of these technologies. Understanding students' perceptions is essential for developi

UNLABELLED: The rapid integration of generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) tools, such as ChatGPT, into educational contexts has raised important questions regarding how adolescents conceptualize and make sense of these technologies. Understanding students' perceptions is essential for developing age-appropriate, ethical, and pedagogically sound approaches to AI use in secondary education. This descriptive qualitative study employed a phenomenological approach and metaphor analysis to explore secondary school students' perceptions of generative artificial intelligence. The study sample consisted of 332 students aged 14-18 years from four secondary schools in Türkiye. Data were collected using an open-ended prompt ("Generative artificial intelligence is like … because …") and analyzed through content analysis. Metaphors were categorized based on shared semantic and conceptual features, and inter-rater reliability was established using Cohen's kappa (κ = 0.92). Analysis revealed ten metaphor categories clustered under five overarching themes: generative artificial intelligence as (1) a source of knowledge, (2) a teaching and guiding entity, (3) a supportive and assisting tool, (4) a reflection of human intelligence, and (5) a dual-purpose (beneficial-risky) technology. Students most frequently conceptualized GenAI as a comprehensive knowledge source (e.g., book, encyclopedia) and as a human-like cognitive entity (e.g., brain, wise person). At the same time, metaphors reflecting ethical awareness and potential risks, such as misuse and overreliance, were also identified. The findings indicate that secondary school students hold multifaceted and nuanced perceptions of generative artificial intelligence, encompassing both educational opportunities and ethical concerns. These results highlight the importance of integrating AI literacy into secondary education in ways that promote critical thinking, responsible use, and awareness of GenAI's limitations alongside its potential benefits. CONCLUSION: It was determined that secondary school students perceive generative artificial intelligence ambivalently as both a useful tool and a source of ethical and emotional concern, highlighting the need for developmentally appropriate artificial intelligence literacy approaches. WHAT IS KNOWN: • GenAI tools such as ChatGPT are increasingly integrated into educational contexts and have the potential to support personalized learning, information access, and student engagement. • Existing research has primarily focused on educators' perspectives or higher education settings, while studies examining adolescents' perceptions of GenAI remain limited. WHAT IS NEW: • This study provides empirical evidence on secondary school students' metaphorical perceptions of generative artificial intelligence within a K-12 context. • Findings reveal that adolescents conceptualize GenAI in multifaceted ways, including as a knowledge source, teaching and guiding entity, supportive tool, reflection of human intelligence, and a dual-purpose (beneficial-risky) technology.

Source

Özbay, Özkan. European journal of pediatrics, 2026. DOI: 10.1007/s00431-026-07007-0

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