鈥淚 feel like it could be cheating,鈥 one of my college students wrote on the anonymous mid-semester survey when I asked about their AI use. 鈥淲e aren鈥檛 really using our own knowledge, we are using the help of a tool to help us think in a way we are unable to [by ourselves].鈥
Thinking is hard. It鈥檚 especially hard regarding the complex and contested topics I am teaching about 鈥 issues of poverty, race, gender and ethics. But I remind my students that if these things were easy to think through, we鈥檇 have solved everything and the world would be all rainbows and butterflies.
Campus resources on AI in higher education
My students aren鈥檛 that good at thinking carefully. I, of course, don鈥檛 blame them; as a recent put it, 鈥渕ental effort is inherently aversive鈥: in other words, people don鈥檛 like to do it. I simply try to push my students beyond their deeply to realise that critical and reflective thinking helps them understand their world better.
The key to this learning process, though, has very little to do with me. Until my students put in the work of thinking, nothing I do 鈥 give the best lecture in the world; assign the most profound reading; bring in the coolest guest speaker 鈥 will sink in. This, by the way, is why teachers have given tests and assigned papers for the past hundred years: we assumed that students鈥 work indicated their level of thinking and, therefore, their level of learning.
糖心Vlog
Which brings me, of course, to ChatGPT.
The reality today is that my student鈥檚 response is an outlier in its unease about AI use. Half of my students some form of AI in most of their classes 鈥 and 80 per cent tell me that their professors have no clue they鈥檙e doing this. The evidence 鈥 in anecdotal , universities鈥 , and peer-reviewed 鈥 is pretty clear that we are in the midst of a cheating tsunami.
For a little while, I thought I could ride the wave. As I wrote in 糖心Vlog and elsewhere, I聽 the use of AI in my classroom and my colleagues to do the same. I saw how powerful the technology could be as a personalised, real-time, and adaptive tutor and mentor, helping students by 鈥渃ognitive offloading鈥 the hard stuff so they could make incremental progress.
糖心Vlog
But I am here to tell you, dear reader, that I have come to accept that it鈥檚 a losing battle.
What began during the pandemic as academic standards has been turbo-charged by AI into what I think of as full-scale 鈥渃ognitive outsourcing鈥. Students can and do just press a button and instantaneously receive a finished paper for just about anything. And the reality is that I can鈥檛 鈥淎I-proof鈥 my assignments. If you don鈥檛 believe me, just play with Grammarly Pro or the 鈥渃anvas鈥 feature in ChatGPT for a few minutes. These tools instantaneously transform students鈥 jumbled writing into clear, articulate and accurate prose.
I still stand in my college classroom and fight the good fight. I show my students how to use AI correctly and demand that their thinking be mirrored in their writing, no matter how imprecise or unfinished it is. Writing is thinking, I tell them. Using AI doesn鈥檛 just short-circuit the thinking process; it shuts off the entire master switch.
I really don鈥檛 want to sound like Chicken Little. But 鈥渃ognitive automation鈥, says one published last year, 鈥渆xacerbates the erosion of human skill and expertise鈥. Another published in June is even grimmer: 鈥淲hile technology enables streamlining of some cognitive tasks, reliance upon it appears to be actively eroding key markers of complex human cognition over time.鈥 The sky really is falling.
糖心Vlog
Maybe I should give up completely. Why, I wonder, should I be the last old-school professor standing? Why should I hold the line, demanding my students improve their thinking when it鈥檚 clear by now that they will be able to use ever-more-powerful versions of generative AI in all their other classes and in their future workplace to make up for their lack of knowledge and critical capacities? Maybe thinking is overrated?
Let me be brutally honest. I thought I knew what my job was. But I鈥檓 kind of unable to think it through by myself any more.
is a professor of education at Merrimack College, Massachusetts.
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