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ChatGPT Has Colleges in Emergency Mode to Shield Academic Integrity

Edsurge

After all, it’s tailor-made to craft the kinds of essays that instructors ask for. To get a national perspective, EdSurge recently connected with Derek Newton, a journalist who runs a weekly Substack newsletter called The Cheat Sheet , about academic integrity and cheating. So professors have been quick to respond.

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A taxonomy for using AI in education

eSchool News

Educators and institutions are grappling with how best to integrate these tools into the learning environment while balancing innovation with ethical considerations, assessment concerns, and instructor comfort. Schools or instructors adopting this stance may wish to emphasize traditional methods of learning and assessment.

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Should Instructors Ask Students to Show Document Histories to Guard Against AI Cheating?

Edsurge

He was one of several professors who outlined their objections to the practice on a blog post last month of a joint task force on AI and writing organized by two prominent academic groups the Modern Language Association and the Conference on College Composition and Communication. Opting in doesnt make sense in this situation, she argues.

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Embracing Artificial Intelligence in the Classroom 

Faculty Focus

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is not new. The rise of ChatGPT, Google Bard, New Bing, and others in the academic space, however, is skyrocketing. Instructors can use AI for editing as well. Some of the biggest challenges are preserving the actual learning experience and academic integrity.

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Student success is impacted by issues outside of school, survey finds

eSchool News

While some educators worry that technology and artificial intelligence (AI) might have a negative effect in these areas, many see the positive impact of AI on students’ ability to learn in their preferred languages, improved grades and career readiness.

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Embracing Artificial Intelligence in the Classroom 

Faculty Focus

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is not new. The rise of ChatGPT, Google Bard, New Bing, and others in the academic space, however, is skyrocketing. Instructors can use AI for editing as well. Some of the biggest challenges are preserving the actual learning experience and academic integrity.

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What Higher Ed Gets Wrong About AI Chatbots — From the Student Perspective

Edsurge

And as someone who is also a former journalist and editor for EdSurge, I recognize that we should never plagiarize, and that artificially-intelligent chatbots are very, very capable of responding to prompts like “Write me a 500-word essay on Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night.” So how can that work? So how can that work?