Technology
Artificial intelligence (AI)
OpenAI
ChatGPT
Computing
With adjustments to the way we teach students to think about writing, we can
shift the emphasis from product to process
It’s getting close to the beginning of term. Parents are starting to fret about
lunch packs, school uniforms and schoolbooks. School leavers who have university
places are wondering what freshers’ week will be like. And some university
professors, especially in the humanities, will be apprehensively pondering how
to deal with students who are already more adept users of large language models
(LLMs) than they are.
They’re right to be concerned. As Ian Bogost, a professor of film and media and
computer science at Washington University in St Louis, puts it: “If the first
year of AI college ended in a feeling of dismay, the situation has now devolved
into absurdism. Teachers struggle to continue teaching even as they wonder
whether they are grading students or computers; in the meantime, an endless AI
cheating and detection arms race plays out in the background.”
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