I know that we’re all still feeling our way around this issue, but how are other profs handling it? What is good evidence of unauthorized AI use? How do you handle a student who refuses to engage in attempts to get their side of the story?

For my classes, we talk once a month or so about acceptable use (treat it like a not-very-bright friend who’s overconfident and prone to hallucinations). It’s okay to brainstorm, bounce ideas, and generally use AI to spark creative problem solving. It’s not okay to have it do your assignments.

  • CaptObvious@literature.cafeOP
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    1 year ago

    Indeed, it does not sound like grade begging in this context. I’m sure that your professors would agree that you’re welcome, and thanks for acknowledging their work as well. I hope you find a way to say this to them.

    Mostly, I agree with you about acceptable AI use, although this is still very fluid and subject to change. There’s no significant difference, to my mind, in working with a human sounding board and working with AI in that role. The problem comes when the AI generates most or all of the final product and the student submits it as their own. That’s not even close to acceptable, particularly in a writing class where the entire point is learning to produce one’s own good writing. However, as you note, other profs have different perspectives depending on their course objectives and professional fields. That is appropriate.

    My issue in the original post was students who either mostly or entirely copy the prompt into an AI generator and then submit the result for a grade. Such essays hardly ever actually address the question or even follow instructions. They would fail in any circumstance, but the nature of their creation also violates the course’s academic integrity policy.

    Even text spinners, while useful to improve a few words to express an idea, can land students in trouble. When spinners are overused, the student’s voice (and sometimes their entire message) is lost. No one should want that. I’ve had students fail assignments because the submission no longer represented their own writing; rather, it reflected lengthy periods refining the input. It isn’t plagiarism according to my class definition, but it’s also not acceptable.

    You do raise an interesting idea: How long until we need to include a lesson on crafting appropriate AI prompts in order to help students use them as tools and not as unpaid ghost writers? That’s probably a very different, deep, and interesting rabbit hole.

    At any rate, even though it technically violates the community rules, I hope the mods leave your message here. To my mind, it’s good to have the student perspective as we wrestle with this new menace, er, “tool” in education settings. Thanks for posting.