According to a March 6, 2023 opinion piece in the Chronicle of Higher Education by Beth McMurtrie, while some academics are concerned that generative AI like ChatGPT will encourage students to take shortcuts and present the work of AI as their own.
Others see potential for ChatGPT
- to help students and professors brainstorm,
- to kick-start an essay,
- to explain a confusing idea, and
- to smooth out awkward first drafts.
To respond to these concerns, colleges are creating campus-wide committees, teaching centers are rolling out workshops, and some professors are producing newsletters, creating explainer videos, and crowdsourcing resources and classroom policies.
Academic-integrity experts suggest that educators teach students about the potential of AI tools and their ethical challenges rather than trying to ban their use entirely.
Campus groups are now examining these questions, including developing plans for educating students, staff, and faculty about AI and considering requiring students to graduate with a level of digital and technological literacy.
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