“…In our view, however, these challenges should not forestall consideration of how evaluation methods from other fields can be adapted for use in RAI tool evaluations. Indeed, research in educational contexts like schools is also subject to changing policies, state standards, students moving from an intervention to control group when enrolling in a new class or school, as well as exogenous shocks like teacher strikes, political violence, and school closures, among others [117]. Conversely, as AI technologies and development paradigms are increasingly incorporated into medical or education interventions, these domains are also starting to consider how to apply their familiar evaluation approaches to AI technologies [e.g., in healthcare, 134,170][e.g., in education, 36], and how to translate insights from RAI to their evaluation practices [e.g.…”