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Philip Nolan's avatar

I think I need to read *The Young Lady's Illustrated Primer* one more time, to see how its aged...

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Anthony (Tony) Anadio's avatar

AI, like many technologies, will have great advantages and great disadvantages. A disadvantage from where I sit as a History professor is that in the past year, student posts and essays have gotten considerably better in their grammar. I’m certain they are using AI, but no matter what any of the “experts” at my institution say, it is difficult, if not impossible to prove. It’s almost refreshing to read something from a student with clunky language, but I’m guessing AI could do that too, if the student gave it the right prompt. I just cannot trust that what I’m reading is actual student work, which in small ways can limit the credibility of high-performing students. I honestly don’t know what to do other than grade what I read as if it is legitimate. A possible solution would be to track every keystroke and record video of their work for the class, but that would be expensive and time consuming to monitor.

AI can provide information, however, it still has to be valid in reality. If there were a way to pair or test the information that we learn from AI with some reference to the real world that we know is accurate (verified articles/books/videos/etc. or actual people with expertise), then that would mitigate some of the possible disadvantages. The more sources of information you can access, the better. The proliferation of AI might have the ironic effect of increasing the value we place on in-person experiences. Computers are great, but people are better.

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