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Navigating AI Writing in the University Classroom

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Karla Turner

Student Writer

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ChatGPT

The at the 快活app hosted a lunchtime panel on Tuesday, Feb. 28, to discuss ChatGPT and AI writing tools. A cross-disciplinary panel of 快活app faculty experts shared their insights on the potential of this new technology, expressing enthusiasm for its value in higher education.

鈥淭hese tools are here to stay,鈥 said , assistant professor in the . 鈥淲e need to be teaching responsible use.鈥

Educators on the panel reported they have already started incorporating ChatGPT into their curricula, testing its usefulness and its limits with student collaboration. 鈥淲e do our students a disservice by blocking them from this technology--because they may need to know how to use it in the real world,鈥 said Richard Colby, a teaching professor in the . The panel discussed a range of issues related to the predictive-learning tool, like equity, accessibility, copyright, privacy and plagiarism.

Lisa Titus, assistant professor in the , suggested we might be witnessing a paradigm shift in the way knowledge is made as we broaden our focus beyond the single creator. Yet, some aspects will continue to be murky, like who owns the data being utilized by ChatGPT.

Assistive technology in education is not exactly new. From spell check to Google, people have been working with less sophisticated versions of ChatGPT for decades. , assistant professor in the Department of Computer Science, thinks people will feel more comfortable incorporating AI tools into their lives when they have a better understanding of how it works, and that is exactly what these educators have set out to do.

Leslie Cramblet Alvarez, director of the Office of Teaching and Learning, has participated in media interviews related to ChatGPT with and .