Anonymous wrote:The only way to find out if kids can write an essay is to give them an old school blue book and have them write by hand in class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:English teachers are being replaced by chargpt
Everyone has access to it and yet, here you are, misspelling it.
FFS, PP. Listen to yourself. Look at an actual keyboard. The "r" key is literally just slightly to the left of the "t" key. Look at "QWERTY". Notice how close the R is to the T? Simple mistake. Some of us are human, and not snarky hatred-filled meatsacks like you.
Try spellchecking before you post. You know… like use a tool!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:English teachers are being replaced by chargpt
Everyone has access to it and yet, here you are, misspelling it.
FFS, PP. Listen to yourself. Look at an actual keyboard. The "r" key is literally just slightly to the left of the "t" key. Look at "QWERTY". Notice how close the R is to the T? Simple mistake. Some of us are human, and not snarky hatred-filled meatsacks like you.
Anonymous wrote:This is a discussion that unfortunately has HUGE nuance in schools. I have taught 6-12.
Currently, sixth grade. My students are learning how to structure paragraphs, organize arguments, and what rhetorical devices are. These kids should not be using any generative AI -- as I tell them, "Until you can tell me WHY the AI answer is better than what you can write, you can't use it." They don't know what words mean and don't think to check to make sure the answer is correct. Until they know this, AI isn't a tool they should use for their own writing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:English teachers are being replaced by chargpt
Everyone has access to it and yet, here you are, misspelling it.
Anonymous wrote:English teachers are being replaced by chargpt