Anonymous wrote:Well AI generates lots my in class test questions, grades and even generates lecture material. I go over it and fix it. Students are allowed to use AI for hw because why not but they still have to learn the material.
Just putting your hw into ai means you are wasting your time. The best students are using ai to generate test questions to study, understand the material and review their essays to make them better. And yes using ai to accelerate drudgery thst doesn’t have value to them just like employers ask us to. You haven’t thought about this question at all really.
I can see at least one of my sons teachers uses it to make assignments in his language class too so k-12 I’m sure is moving there.
Anonymous wrote:It's ironic that workplaces are forcing workers to use AI, show the shareholders How Much AI We are Using- So Much AI. Meanwhile we punish students for using it.
I think to even it all out, kids should use it but not be allowed to paste AI in. Whatever the form AI is spitting out to us we should all be using our brains to critically read/view/ingest what the Borg has provided and really think about it. Not just grab and go.
Anonymous wrote:It's ironic that workplaces are forcing workers to use AI, show the shareholders How Much AI We are Using- So Much AI. Meanwhile we punish students for using it.
I think to even it all out, kids should use it but not be allowed to paste AI in. Whatever the form AI is spitting out to us we should all be using our brains to critically read/view/ingest what the Borg has provided and really think about it. Not just grab and go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:STEM faculty here so don't have to error about AI-written essays turned in by students. One way to fight AI is to limit assignments to no more than 10% of the total grade (tell students their effort doing lowly-weighted assignments will pay off during exam and make that true) and make in-class midterm and final exams the remaining 90%. If the class has individual/group projects/labs that are hands-on, then AI can't do much. If they are "take home" and are merely much more difficult assignments, it'll be harder to catch but fortunately few classes I teach have those types of projects. So far, my TAs have told me some students did use AI because sometimes the techniques and mathematical notations they used to do assignments were not the ones covered in class. It's unmistakeable. It's also sad and depressing to see and I'm sure those in the humanities have seen it much worse. I remember this phrase from a professor to students that went viral recently: "I cannot want to learn this more than you" which I completely agree.
This sounds miserable. Might as well go to school in Europe.
Anonymous wrote:STEM faculty here so don't have to error about AI-written essays turned in by students. One way to fight AI is to limit assignments to no more than 10% of the total grade (tell students their effort doing lowly-weighted assignments will pay off during exam and make that true) and make in-class midterm and final exams the remaining 90%. If the class has individual/group projects/labs that are hands-on, then AI can't do much. If they are "take home" and are merely much more difficult assignments, it'll be harder to catch but fortunately few classes I teach have those types of projects. So far, my TAs have told me some students did use AI because sometimes the techniques and mathematical notations they used to do assignments were not the ones covered in class. It's unmistakeable. It's also sad and depressing to see and I'm sure those in the humanities have seen it much worse. I remember this phrase from a professor to students that went viral recently: "I cannot want to learn this more than you" which I completely agree.