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Education AI

'I Used to Teach Students. Now I Catch ChatGPT Cheats' (thewalrus.ca) 112

Philosophy/ethics professor Troy Jollimore looks at the implications of a world where many students are submitting AI-generated essays. ("Sometimes they will provide quotations, giving page numbers that, as often as not, do not seem to correspond to anything in the actual world...") Ideally if the students write the essays themselves, "some of them start to feel it. They begin to grasp that thinking well, and in an informed manner, really is different from thinking poorly and from a position of ignorance. That moment, when you start to understand the power of clear thinking, is crucial.

"The trouble with generative AI is that it short-circuits that process entirely." One begins to suspect that a great many students wanted this all along: to make it through college unaltered, unscathed. To be precisely the same person at graduation, and after, as they were on the first day they arrived on campus. As if the whole experience had never really happened at all. I once believed my students and I were in this together, engaged in a shared intellectual pursuit. That faith has been obliterated over the past few semesters. It's not just the sheer volume of assignments that appear to be entirely generated by AI — papers that show no sign the student has listened to a lecture, done any of the assigned reading, or even briefly entertained a single concept from the course...

It's other things too... The students who beg you to reconsider the zero you gave them in order not to lose their scholarship. (I want to say to them: Shouldn't that scholarship be going to ChatGPT?â) It's also, and especially, the students who look at you mystified. The use of AI already seems so natural to so many of them, so much an inevitability and an accepted feature of the educational landscape, that any prohibition strikes them as nonsensical. Don't we instructors understand that today's students will be able, will indeed be expected, to use AI when they enter the workforce? Writing is no longer something people will have to do in order to get a job.

Or so, at any rate, a number of them have told me. Which is why, they argue, forcing them to write in college makes no sense. That mystified look does not vanish — indeed, it sometimes intensifies — when I respond by saying: Look, even if that were true, you have to understand that I don't equate education with job training.

What do you mean? they might then ask.

And I say: I'm not really concerned with your future job. I want to prepare you for life...

My students have been shaped by a culture that has long doubted the value of being able to think and write for oneself — and that is increasingly convinced of the power of a machine to do both for us. As a result, when it comes to writing their own papers, they simply disregard it. They look at instructors who levy such prohibitions as irritating anachronisms, relics of a bygone, pre-ChatGPT age.... As I go on, I find that more of the time, energy, and resources I have for teaching are dedicated to dealing with this issue. I am doing less and less actual teaching, more and more policing. Sometimes I try to remember the last time I actually looked forward to walking into a classroom. It's been a while.

'I Used to Teach Students. Now I Catch ChatGPT Cheats'

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  • by Talon0ne ( 10115958 ) on Sunday March 09, 2025 @03:38PM (#65221703)

    If you'd prefer to cheat in college, something you're presumably paying for, then you should be expelled. Make a spot for someone who's serious about learning. You get one warning.

    • Interesting FP, but what if the most valuable skills to learn these years are how to use software tools of various types?

      I actually wonder if there should be two testing tracks, one for people who want to do it in their heads and a separate kind of tests for people who want to use computers to help them work. Should be able to ask much more interesting questions to the students in the second category. But have to use "extreme" AI to grade their tests?

      The tools remain morally neutral. It's what you do with t

      • If they need to teach a class on how to use AI tools, then let them. If your professor (and/or TA) state clearly at the beginning of the class that AI tools are not allowed for final submissions and that AI submissions will result in a 0, then the student should not be surprised to receive a failing grade.

      • by beelsebob ( 529313 ) on Sunday March 09, 2025 @05:37PM (#65221913)

        But university isnâ(TM)t for teaching skills. Thatâ(TM)s what a vocational college is for. University is for teaching you how to think, and come up with new ideas. The goal of getting you to write an essay isnâ(TM)t to teach you how to write, or how to use a tool. Itâ(TM)s to teach you to research a topic, to think about the things youâ(TM)ve researched, and to then communicate that idea. Itâ(TM)s one thing to write down the ideas youâ(TM)ve had, as then have AI proof read what you write. Itâ(TM)s quite another to have ai come up with all the âoeideasâ.

        • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

          "University is for teaching you how to think, and come up with new ideas."

          What a load of garbage. With more than 20 years in the creative technology industry there is one thing of which I am very certain... college grads rate FAR behind high IQ self taught individuals when it comes to the ability to think and form new ideas. This shouldn't come as any surprise because they haven't had to THINK at all, they've merely learned to cook their way through a very extensive recipe book their academic instructors th

      • I agree with the expel then answer. I see what you are suggesting, but the students weren't using the AI as a tool, but as a way to cheat. This isn't any different then using a camera to take a picture and then claiming it was something you "painted". A tool was used, but not to help, but to completely do.

        I'm fine with using the AI to brainstorm, make suggestions, or even help with grammar and spelling. But once you tell it "do the whole thing for me", then you aren't doing any work/learning and are just ch
      • The teachers give homework, grade homework, and give the students a grade. By doing so, the teachers are also grading themselves. The student's grade is also a statement about how good a job the teacher is doing teaching the student. No student wants to take a class from the teacher that flunks most of them, and so on.

        The incentives don't line up with the results we want. The same goes for students, most of whom are after a high grade for entirely practical reasons (it translates directly to scholarship

        • by Moryath ( 553296 )

          By doing so, the teachers are also grading themselves. The student's grade is also a statement about how good a job the teacher is doing teaching the student.

          And yet, students in the same class often perform very differently. And often this is not the fault of the teacher or professor, but rather, the student's decision not to engage honestly and put in the needed effort.

      • by taustin ( 171655 )

        Interesting FP, but what if the most valuable skills to learn these years are how to use software tools of various types?

        Then schools should have classes specifically about that.

        In the meantime, unless you're claiming that's the only skill to be taught, it should be banned in classes where it is cheating, and like all cheating, its use should be punished.

      • by troff ( 529250 )

        > but what if the most valuable skills to learn these years are how to use software tools of various types?

        Then, cover that in a f***ing software tools course, not an ethics course.

    • I disagree. If you choose to cheat for something you are paying for, your money spends just as well as the guy who studies. However, all parties involved in sponsoring said student should be able to receive accurate reports on their asset, and hold the school accountable for the quality of those assessments, even if it means that funding gets withdrawn.

      • At a university the education is not the product, you are the product. No sense letting everyone pass because they paid.

        • A piece of paper is the product. The value of that piece of paper is between those who paid money for it, and those who are accepting it as some form of qualification.

          A good number of degrees from Ivy League schools have always been junk. Those schools were about connecting rich brats with intelligent skilled labor. Obviously they must let the rich brats through, but hold the intellient workers to high standards.

          • Re:Expel them... (Score:4, Insightful)

            by test321 ( 8891681 ) on Sunday March 09, 2025 @06:07PM (#65221979)

            A piece of paper is the product. The value of that piece of paper is between those who paid money for it, and those who are accepting it as some form of qualification.

            Precisely, and that's why letting cheaters graduate is bad for everyone involved. It lowers the value (acceptance as form of qualification) of the piece paper, as it gets quickly known that a number of graduates exhibiting the same piece of paper appear to know nothing about the matter of interest. The current students, the past students, all who have studied and paid to enjoy a well-reputed piece of paper, should be infuriated by the fact that cheaters can get it and threaten its value on the job market.

            • A piece of paper is the product. The value of that piece of paper is between those who paid money for it, and those who are accepting it as some form of qualification.

              Precisely, and that's why letting cheaters graduate is bad for everyone involved. It lowers the value (acceptance as form of qualification) of the piece paper, as it gets quickly known that a number of graduates exhibiting the same piece of paper appear to know nothing about the matter of interest. The current students, the past students, all who have studied and paid to enjoy a well-reputed piece of paper, should be infuriated by the fact that cheaters can get it and threaten its value on the job market.

              Exactly. The problem with AI generation is that the person will end up with absolutely no idea about their major. So in a novel situation, or if they are away from their computer, they are worse than worthless. After all, say we follow this path for say 50 years, innovation and knowledge will halt, because no one knows what to write. We'll be AI'ing old stuff.

      • Well, consider that cheaters are consuming space in an already expensive market, overcrowded by poor students who's only qualification is they have money. People think colleges are hard to get into... BS. You have money, you get in.. So letting in people who don't deserve to be there by their own laziness can go right to the curb. Get them out, college numbers drop, and in the process becomes smaller and cheaper. IDK, that's my idea anyway.

      • No, that's a terrible idea.

        1) Universities don't have infinite capacity.
        2) The meaning of your degree becomes more confused than it already is.

        The pay structure of universities is unfortunate, but in no way should it ever be construed that you are paying for a degree. You are paying for an opportunity to earn a degree.
    • Persistent cheating should result in expulsion.

      And reading the comments below, I now realize the average age of many of the commenters. I never realized that so many were still in highschool (judging from their defensiveness about cheating together with their choice of language).

      They are so biased and think that pretending to know about something when you don't is not the problem. The problem is everyone else.

      Well it's not. And sadly so many people don't even pretend to care about personal integrity.

      I will

      • Yes, but if we are going to consider AI generated content acceptable... well we really don't need those grads anymore. They're just a human interface with AI.
        • We also won't need to pay those people much of anything because the only job will apparently be "AI prompter". That's until AI just replaces the person altogether. It doesn't really make sense to cheat yourself out of an education but many of these folks probably shouldn't even be in college to begin with. Unfortunately, it's essentially a high school to university pipeline and most kids will be directed through it. For a lot of careers, it's still the best move as well.

          I'm currently taking a programming cl

    • So most of them aren't paying for college they're paying for the degree that gets them past the HR filters designed to only hire H1B immigrants.

      Actually going to college for the purpose of learning is a luxury most people don't get to have anymore. The older generations who enjoyed that luxury took it away because of reasons. These days they're working on taking away democracy because of additional reasons.

      But actual learning isn't something we value. We value the ability to make money and absolutel
      • Consider the many submissions we get to Slashdot every day related to the "hard sciences". Landers touching down on the Moon, new developments in fusion power, grid-scale battery installations, etc. Every day we read articles written about engineers, chemists, physicists, etc. doing work that requires actual learning. Those people went to college to learn, and their degrees show the work they've accomplished. Those people absolutely can't afford to "phone it in" and let AI do all the work for them. Tho

    • If everyone is cheating and you expel them all, there will be no one left.

      A far better approach for this professor would be to use a tool like RevisionHistory.com

      Itâ(TM)s a totally free chrome plugin that gives stats on how a document was constructed, by analyzing the revision history. It will tell you how many copy/pastes there were, the size of them, and will even let the user to do a âoereplayâ to watch the document being written at high speed to help understand the student process. The s

      • Unless something has changed in recent years Google docs are garbage for writing papers with citations. MS desktop Word , for all of its limitations and quirkiness, at least has a citation manager built in. And can do all of the "common" styles. AND can have plugins for external citation managers that still lets you insert citations in the document on the fly.

        Last I looked at Gdocs it had zero support for citation management, and no way to insert inline citations other than manually typing them out. Maybe i

        • Yes, but the goal of the tool here is not (necessarily ) to give the student the optimal writing experience. Itâ(TM)s to give the lecturer a view into how they thought.

    • If you'd prefer to cheat in college, something you're presumably paying for, then you should be expelled. Make a spot for someone who's serious about learning. You get one warning.

      There was a news special several years ago, I think on ABC, about cheating in college and many students interviewed said all they cared about was getting good grades, so they could get a good job and make a lot of money. Actually learning things wasn't a big concern. Not sure how they thought that would work out in the long run, but they didn't seem to care. And in most cases, they weren't paying for college anyway, their parents were...

      I agree with your sentiment. I worked and paid my own way throug

  • If you know students are going to cheat if you give them take-home assignments, then stop giving them take-home assignments! Have them write papers in class. This isn't a new idea. I remember writing in-class papers from my time in college 30 years ago.

    The professors are just being lazy. They want to continue as if nothing has changed. Well, that's not the case. ChatGPT is a huge fucking change. So, adapt to it. Change your class so that students can't take advantage of that tool. Bitching about student
    • by godrik ( 1287354 ) on Sunday March 09, 2025 @03:57PM (#65221747)

      The problem with that is that you only have limited amount of contact hours. It takes more time for a student to learn that the amount of contact hours you have. The purpose of assignments is to make students engage with the content of the class outside of class time.

      Overtime, we have conflated homework-for-practice and homework-for-assessment. But there is a lot of resistance to homework-for-practice.

      I give terribly low-stakes assignments and almost everything I get is from stackoverflow and chatgpt. Then these students get slammed on exams. Which I think is fair, but university administrations don't like that.

      Now if you have ideas for alternative strategies, I'm all ears!

      • Less lectures, more in class assignments, no out of class assignments ... just deal with the fact you have less hours to give them assignments.

        Don't compare your modern class to a decade ago, it's a whole new one. You can teach something within those restrictions, if it's less than a decade ago, so be it.

        • Use the technology to your advantage. Record the lecture. Make watching the lecture the take-home assignment. Students can sit and listen on their own time. Reserve in-class time to actually performing work. That's when students will actually have questions that need answering - when they're attempting to apply the lesson themselves.
          • You could take that one step further and have a zoom meeting for lecture time. If you already have in person class time, then make the lecture attendance optional but maybe give extra credit for attending. Then students will need to watch the lecture prior to in-person class. Then, as you said, class time can be used for doing stuff and answering questions.

            I do like the idea of large exams for most the grade. In two of my classes I have mid terms and finals, both being 20% each of the grade. In some of my o

      • You asked for an alternative strategy... there is a free tool for this: RevisionHistory.com

        It's chrome plugin for Google Docs that analyzes the doc's revision history and gives stats about how it was constructed. For example, it will tell you how many copy/pastes, how many of them were big copy/pastes, how long the student spent on the assignment. You can even do a replay which shows the document being written at high-speed to help understand the student's writing / thinking process. The student does not ne

        • by godrik ( 1287354 )

          That's seems pretty good for paper writing assignments.

          I've tried something like that for programming assignment that leverages git. The problem is that often the student would just push to git at the end of the project. That does not leave much history to analyze.

          I know colleagues in programming 1 are using a dedicated programming environment that essentially builds history of code. And they find it useful indeed.

          • So I'm taking a programming class this semester. The platform they have us working on is ZYbooks. All the programming is done in the web browser and then is graded by an auto-grader. So far, it's done a good job all around. Even though I setup a my own environment locally and installed an IDE that was mentioned, I didn't really need to.

            I will sometimes use my own IDE just to try a portion of my program before inserting it into the rest of it on the website, but it's minimal. I could see people cheating with

        • I write in Emacs with LaTeX for typesetting. I suppose I could save every revision in Git. I'm sure a humanities professor would love that.

      • In the case of TFA, it's a damn philosophy class. The "homework" should be doing the assigned reading. Then a lecture / discussion session or two covering the readings, with participation graded. Don't participate in a discussion based class? Don't get a good grade. Period.

        I tutored philosophy for over 4 years. I also taught some of the classes when other faculty were away at conferences. Philosophy is an engagement based class. If the students can't, or won't, engage then they should be penalized. The only

    • When I went to college, the whole endeavor was considered a "take-home assignment". You sat in class primarily to receive lecture, instruction, dialectic, feedback. Your work was done outside of class.

      This wasn't even somewhere with dormitories, it was community college. Are you sure you're not remembering high school?

    • Or at least give them writing pop-quizzes, say 10 minutes and one question on the topic of the week. And then for the essay they have to write about their previous answers in detail. They may still use an LLM for content, but they will at least have to organize the content around their previous assertions wrong or right.
    • In practice you just don't have enough information to really write a useful essay that you actually have learned anything about or from doing it off the cuff like that. So what you end up doing is memorizing a handful of essays you can spit out. It's completely worthless as a learning tactic.

      It would solve the cheating problem but I think that's the problem here entirely.

      We aren't really asking how we can have people learn and be better people and better citizens we're all just focused on how we can
    • Teachers are being lazy? Have you heard of irony?
    • by Teun ( 17872 )
      Around here a university degree will only be given after you have defended your thesis.
      Although this is often a pro-forma event it can be a real question and answer affair and this does not have to be limited to university studies.
      Those that have used AI to write their work will almost certainly have trouble correctly answering questions about it.
    • Clearly you didn't read the article. The professor was considering changing her classes / assignments in a way that students can't use AI, but that a) limits the number of topics severely, b) that list may be empty soon.So she decided against it. Second, in-class papers do not benefit everybody and are taking up a lot of time, including that of the professor (who could arguably be doing some work while the students are scribbling away).

      So next time before you call someone lazy, do the work and read the arti

    • Peak slashdot. I know nothing about your job, but I just heard a snippet of your problem and have developed a solution that sounds good. You're either lazy or stupid for not implementing it. Sometimes, it's good if you can have people think about a topic for more than 30 minutes before writing a paper on it.
  • I'm excited
    I can imagine a future where students have the AI equivalent of an Einstein to help them learn physics
    I suspect that many more students would be curious and eager to learn if teaching was improved
    Of course, some don't want to learn. In the past, they cheated on exams or paid others to write their papers. The only thing that's different now are the tools

    • I read a novel recently, The Martian Time-Slip, that had a similar concept. The teachers were all robots programmed to sound like historical figures. It sounds "cool" in a sci-fi novel, and it might cause a few teenagers to say "Wow so cool" the first time they see it. And I'm certain there is a company somewhere that wants to harness that effect to make a sale.

      Once that's all worn off I'm not convinced the robot would be better at teaching. Generally I see Philip K Dick as dystopian fiction, not an aspirat

    • I don't think you're getting the point here ... my takeaway is that nobody *wants* to learn.
  • by sound+vision ( 884283 ) on Sunday March 09, 2025 @03:53PM (#65221731) Journal

    The process of writing an essay requires you to organize, turn over, comprehend, and contemplate ideas. I recall writing a comment to similar effect here a few months back, and the replies I got sounded a lot like the professor's students. They didn't comprehend that education isn't about the paper, it's about the process you go through to write it.

    And in the business world it seems like "paper pushing" jobs are being taken to a whole new level. If your job involves writing BS, as lots of corporate jobs do, AI is perfectly suited to that. Some departments might be able to cut staff in half and double output with these tools.

    It seems to be coming to a point where people are just trained to nod their heads while ChatGPT writes something that sounds really cool and professional. That's how it's going in school, that's how it's going in business, and in government. All levels of society.

    Having large parts of the population dumb and essentially worthless is very concerning to me. They're liable to end up in a foreign (or domestic) meat grinder. That eventuality may be closer than we believe. Call it the singularity.

    • by Teun ( 17872 )
      Very well spoken!
    • This is the view of a Luddite. Technology evolves and education inevitably evolves with it. In it's infancy, using the Internet for research was prohibited, now no one would suggest all references must come from books. Going back further, you had to turn in hand-written paper, no spell checking or grammar help

      LLMs don't spit out quality papers without good prompts and refinement. They can regurgitate facts and references extremely well but to get a well reasoned argument you have to provide some reas
      • But the LLM is not the best tool for the task, which is to develop the skill to collect, collate, absorb and distill information, then present it coherently. Even IF you think letting the LLM writing the rough draft and you'll just polish it is "the wave of the future" because it saves time or whatever, you cannot actually do that if you are not familiar with the material, or how to present an argument!

    • I guess I'm just an unreconstructed intellectual, because I can't understand how anyone could fail to see that teachers/professors give assignments so that you go through a process of learning.

      The learning happens inside of your own brain, and if you don't do the learning your brain won't have either the knowledge in the assignment or the experience of having figured out how to gain and use that knowledge. When you know how to learn things that makes you useful for learning things as needed.

      I guess people r

  • just push a button and an essay comes out?

    Because, soldier: the enemy cannot push a button if you disable his hand!

    Now here's an interesting thought: if you are teaching students to prepare them for life, you are implicitly or explicitly also teaching them to organize and present their thoughts for maximal persuasion/education/documentation.

    If your assigments are such that a machine can do them, you are failing to give the correct assignments. Going further, if your assignments are such that students are te

    • It sounds like a nice proposition but in the real world, professors are bounded by available resources like everyone else.

      How exactly would you phrase a very basic assignment (as in, one that would be assigned in a survey level undergraduate class) in a way that a chatbot wouldn't be able to shit out a convincing facsimile of an answer to it, and which doesn't require half a many grad students as students to sort out which is which? The best I can come up with on the spot is to say "embed white size 0 fo
      • Right now, the product is a credential whose prestige is measured less by the quality of the graduates than by factors like research output, selectivity in admissions, or endowment size. Pre chatgpt, these usually correlated to student quality on the way in and on the way out.

        If technology disrupts that correlation, then universities will need to reallocate their finite resources to keep up the perceived value of their product.

    • That sounds hard. Let me ask AI how to do that. /s

      I think you make very good points, but seeing as education is just a business, I don't see how that will make more money than the existing business model.

      Who will offer a better way if it doesn't pay? What person, kid, student wants to do hard things (learn) ?

      I have ALWAYS said, especially around here: people are lazy. I have no reason to believe otherwise. This article , this trend, seems to reinforce that POV.
    • by Teun ( 17872 )
      Indeed, a few times per week I interview engineers for their suitability to work for our company.
      For this we use a standard list of questions but I have the freedom to add anything I believe would help sorting out the good from the bad.
      The simplest of these additional questions is 'why?'
      Because indeed some are smart enough to give the correct answer(s) but then fail when asked to explain the reason(s).
  • by PseudoThink ( 576121 ) on Sunday March 09, 2025 @04:13PM (#65221763)

    I started teaching computer science and engineering classes in a large, public high school a few years ago. There is a significant fraction of students who regularly rely on ChatGPT (or similar tools) to do their work for them. Never mind the private group chats they use to share their work and tips for cheating. They talk about it openly with each other during class or in the hallways, on a regular basis.

    I've had some students who cheated in similar fashion in my class. Whenever I notice it (so far), I take it seriously and go through the normal (and very time consuming) process to document and report it. Then the parents get involved.

    About half the time, the parents challenge the report, based solely on their child's word. I try to make sure they understand the documented evidence, but in the end I always go with whatever the parent prefers, which is usually to rescind the report. Never mind the significant hassle and legal liability doing otherwise would create for myself and administration. I can make mistakes, and it's not always completely obvious whether something constitutes an academic integrity violation. I imagine that if I were the child's parent, I would want their teacher to listen to me and prioritize what I prefer for my own child. I'm not always happy about it, but I'm okay with that.

    Because of all this, I can understand why I hear so many students regularly talking about cheating. It's probably because their teachers don't even try to detect or correct the issue. It's not worth the hassle to them, and its far, far easier to just let it go unaddressed. I think the result is that many high school students learn to normalize various degrees of cheating, cunning tactics, and learn to become rather convincing actors. It's only later in college or on the job that they learn about the real world consequences.

    • by philmarcracken ( 1412453 ) on Sunday March 09, 2025 @05:17PM (#65221885)

      The book "Punished by Rewards" by Alfie Kohn addresses this issue. Kohn argues that when we emphasize external rewards like grades and test scores, we often undermine students' intrinsic motivation to learn and create consequences like cheating.

      The educational system has made the reward (the grade or score) more important than the actual learning:

      * The grade becomes the goal rather than a measurement of learning
      * Students learn to value performance over mastery
      * The extrinsic reward (grade) crowds out intrinsic motivation to understand the material

      Kohn would view cheating as a predictable outcome of reward-based educational approaches. When schools emphasize test performance, rankings, and grades, they inadvertently teach students that the number matters more than the knowledge. Students rationally respond to these incentives by finding the easiest path to the reward - through cheating.
      This doesn't excuse cheating, but it helps explain why reward-focused systems tend to produce it. Restructuring educational approaches to emphasize curiosity, meaningful engagement with material, and learning for understanding rather than for performance metrics could happen, but that would take... effort. Too hard basket? Heh

      • It takes more than effort. There needs to be an evidence-based methodology.

        How do we remove grades from the equation? How do we ensure that teachers can effectively adopt this new teaching method? How do we ensure this teaching method does not show preference to higher-income students? How do we make sure we do not fail an entire generation of students by making them guinea pigs for a wildly new pedagogy?

        I wholeheartedly agree that we need to shift the educational paradigm. I just think that if we are going

      • You can't have both compulsory education [wikipedia.org] and an intrinsic-only reward system.

        The implication of expecting both is that everyone must want to learn and think deeply. That's clearly not the case. Ultimately nations use education certificates as verification for some kind of higher-end work positions. That's inherently an extrinsic reward, and something people will try to cheat at.

        So pick one.

  • The same services that scan for plagiarism also scan for AI. No need to play AI detective when this has been already done and part of most school's mechanisms now.

  • Let them use their out of class time for reading and dedicate more in classroom time for graded work, with a ban on electronic devices, problem solved. It requires balancing the course around grading less hours work, but it's not like out of class time is 10x longer than in class time.

    Or he could continue fighting windmills, but I don't think that constitutes clear thinking.

  • AI will gradually get better so as to not make very many "non-human" mistakes. Look how fast it progressed in 1 decade. If your career depends on policing imperfect bots, time to form a Plan B.

    The cat is NOT going back into the bag, and more are coming out.

    Maybe focus more on critiquing bad writing instead of making it. Give a sample essay or office memo and have students mark and fix the problem spots. That can be monitored in class.

  • >And I say: I'm not really concerned with your future job. I want to prepare you for life...

    The quality of philosophy professors crashed so hard, that this sort of a midwit is now able to become one and actually stay one. I remember the time when only the highest IQ, best arguing people made it as philosophy professors, just a decade ago.

    Instead we get now get halfwits who are trying to gaslight their students that they're at university from 1800s, where you went to study for as long as you felt a need f

  • ChatGPT like all LLM's is only a probability mirror of you.

    It is like an advanced universal translator with a probability statistics engine, it will basically try to predict your next sentence and words.
    It will try to get whatever you are searching for, right. And what is right isn't always right, that depends on you and the probability it has been trained on.

    It's really just as simple as that.

  • I'm sorry, but the ability to write a good essay is a distinct skill independent of whatever it is the student is supposed to be writing about. By default this means that the subject material itself is not the only metric being measured and graded. It's one thing if we're talking graduate level students in a very specific field of study where the generation of research papers becomes a thing, but for many undergraduate courses the essay format is not optimal and is overused.

    • Some good highschools give their students composition classes, either as part of their English curriculum or as a separate course. Those who don't have that background from highschool (or junior high) can/should take remedial courses in college to correct that shortcoming. If someone is taking a philosophy/ethics course, being able to compose a simple essay should be a prerequisite.

  • This is not my first rodeo, and before then it was Encarta cheats and World Book cheats. Thinking is excercise for the brain, and many people don't like excercise that's why obesity is so easy to aquire. Soon we will have neurolinks just telling us all the answers and colleges will be just museums.
  • As the saying goes, "You can lead a horse to water but you can't make it drink; you can teach a man some knowledge but you can't make him think..."

    I understand where he's coming from, but even in college, a fair portion don't want to be academics, and even fewer want to be intellectuals. They want to be taught what to think, not how.

    It's a classic catch-22 type of problem; professors want to transform students into intellectuals, but intellectuals don't need to be taught (they are self-teaching) Consequ

    • This prof is teaching a philosophy course. It's probably a humanities requirement or an "easy A" elective. Most of his students likely aren't pursuing degrees in philosophy. At least let's hope not! The world can only shoulder so many of them. The rest become bartenders.

      • So I have a funny story about filling this requirement.

        Here I was, 17, picking out my classes based on the reqs sheet, etc. I see psychology 120. Sign up. I go find the book at the book store matching numbers and the title. I find the psychology book I need. I get to class. The teacher proceeds to write "Welcome to Philosophy 120".

        I just sat there dumbfounded for a minute. Then I go back and look at the book (I hadn't opened it yet..) and sure as shit, says Philosophy on the cover. I look at the registratio

  • This wasnt a thing when I was in school. I believe if you had the dough, you could pay known paper mills to write for you but I never understood why someone would risk it rather than just put it together yourself since cheating risked expulsion. Hard earned C was always more rewarding than an easy A. Being called in to answer once has to be nerve wrecking especially if its clear you dont know the material, you arnt going to get a second pass.
  • His problem is that he is teaching a subject that no one wants to learn.
    • Learning what challenges you most often leads to the greatest growth.

      • It is not the challenge; it is the lack of interest in the subject. This is the sort of subject that people take because it is a requirement not because they care.
    • Bingo!

    • The successes of "The Good Place" or "My Name is Earl" would seem to run counter to your claim. Granted, they are also probably funnier than your typical philosophy lecture.

      Moreover, courses aren't randomly assigned to you. They chose to enroll.

  • Are you there to develop skills or to build a network of connections?
    In a Cambridge-style debate, I heard on NPR 20 years ago the proponents of the later proposition carried the debate.
    This seems to show that this has become the majority view.
    The problem is that the students and the instructors don't agree on the goals

  • It is no different than using a calculator on your math test. Sometimes the teacher says you are allowed to use a calculator and most of the time you are not allowed. The teacher realizes that you need to know how to do it both ways, but the teacher needs to be clear about when using the tool is appropriate. It sounds like this professor is not being clear and upfront about if and when using AI tools is appropriate.
  • College professors have always had this conceit. But it's a way of thinking that is long out of date with modern education. No one really goes to college by choice, that died in the 90's. Almost everyone is there because they feel like they have to in order to find a well paying job. I'm old enough to remember math teachers in grade school banning the use of calculators and English teachers demanding all our papers be handwritten. Educators always seem to the the last ones to adopt to newer technologie

  • I stopped giving students homework and I evaluate them in class. It's pointless to give out essay assignments at the time of AI.
    In fact, I had to teach math at some point (not my specialty), and the course admin would give us these weekly homework sheets to give out to students. I noticed a few of them do the work and the rest just copies. I told them there is this thing called AI. You can ask it to solve the homework and you don't have to copy from your buddies (I don't care, it's not my course). The nex
  • And of good enough quality for OCR.

    Now, if they cheat, well, they have the benefit of having written it down manually (which has considerable benefit).

    This also forces legible handwriting.

    For the record, so far in high school, all of my kid's writing has been hand written (without the OCR requirement).

  • My colleagues and I in academia talk about this all the time. Everyone can see the ChatGPT freight train heading straight towards liberal arts programs. Anyone who thinks that there is any hope of survival for the educational process in its current form is in denial of what is happening.

    Cheating with ChatGPT is becoming pervasive at the junior-high school level and above. Teachers and professors won't be able to adapt fast enough, and in many cases will themselves be replaced by AIs within a decade. And

    • I totally am down with Neil deGrasse Tyson "all the liberal arts folks pooped their pants". https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

      Liberal Arts not only has a bright future, I believe it to be the only major of consequence to be offered going forward. https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

      We simply can not stick our collective heads in the sand and believe that the way we have been teaching kids is in anyway shape or form the way forward. We must challenge this idea that how well a student reads a book and regurg

  • To be fair, Troy, many of the attendees, quite possibly including you, would not be there at all if it were not for the fact that society is organised in such a way that we must compete with each other to eat and prosper.

    It's human nature to seek efficiency.

  • I once believed my students and I were in this together, engaged in a shared intellectual pursuit.

    I cannot process the notion that college/university instructors are delusional enough to believe that garbage. At best, a small fraction of 1% (slightly higher than zero, at best) of such students are there for that reason. Students are there because the classes are the gateway to a higher paycheck down the road. That is the one and only reason I went. Nowadays, even that objective is getting farther and farther out of reach.

    Long gone are the days when kids went on to higher formal education for the sake of

    • I once believed my students and I were in this together, engaged in a shared intellectual pursuit.

      I cannot process the notion that college/university instructors are delusional enough to believe that garbage.

      Of course students are here because of improved job prospects (attaining the desired career level or getting paid more for the same career) but even in this case, students DID choose voluntarily their subjects. They did not choose at random, they did not necessarily take the easiest choices to get the same degree or the same amount of supposed paycheck increase. Some students may have chose Banking or Law because it (supposedly) pays the most; others have chosen "assembly language" despite being the lowest

  • Hand written submissions only. Why's that so difficult seeing as generations of students managed previously?
  • Give them weekly assignments, tell them to take no more than 3 hours for the week on it, not too bad for a class.
    Tell them under no circumstances to use the Internet, ChatGPT, or anything. Just the source materials and classes and whatever insights they have.
    Do this every week
    Grade as normal every week.
    For the mid term, have them come in with the books, and have computers with no access to the internet or phones. They type up and submit a 3 hour essay on one of the 5 topics you give them (or whatever).
    Compa

    • I don't think there's a school anywhere that has a (academic integrity) policy that would permit removing students based on that state of affairs.

    • by habig ( 12787 )

      This is the way my intro physics classes often end up.

      The ones who wipe out on the tests complain bitterly about being tested on things that weren't taught.

      When, in reality, the same things are on the exams that were on the homeworks which they cheated their way past without thinking. Or in the in-class problem solving sessions where they waited for the people next to them to figure stuff out and just wrote it down to get it done.

      Not that either of those things gets them a whole lot of points. They're wor

    • and have computers with no access to the internet or phones.

      This is the hard part. Universities don't have computer rooms anymore, or they only have for a small group not an exam day with everyone. You can't go BYOD because there are too many ways student will manage to connect to the internet (e.g. hide a 5G hotspot in the toilet).

      We force students to buy a graphing calculator because it can be set in Exam Mode that prevents cheating. But there isn't comparable hardware for essay writing. We'd need a FreeWrite device without internet, but these days all devices fea

  • Grade the student on their use of AI. If they present content that isn't relevant, that doesn't exist, or is patently false...grade it as such. There is a certain minimum proficiency with language that is required for skillful curation of AI-generated content. They'll need to learn the rules of grammar and how to validate resources; these are the core skills that a student demonstrates when they write for themselves. They should learn to treat the AI-generated content as their rough draft, or their outline

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