My next teaching challenge: The AI effect

The chair of my department came into my office and said, “Linda, brush up on AI. You’re going to need to teach your students to use it.” He was referring to my Essentials of Written Communication class, a class where I teach the format and strategy of different types of writing that is important to both their lives on campus and beyond into the business realm.

And I must teach my students to effectively and ethically use AI platforms (such as Chat GPT) to truly prepare them for their future careers. The world is heading that direction and they need to be ready.

I have to admit, I’m a little worried. I’m a veteran of the 5-1/4-inch floppy disk era. Even before that, I navigated my way from typing class in high school (on typewriters) to computers with various floppy disk sizes and on through the many, many versions of Microsoft Word (remember when “Clippy” would give writing advice?).

Clippy, courtesy of Mental Floss

And then came email (woo hoo! Files could be attached and sent instantaneously) and the Internet. So far I’ve managed to move through these past 50 years of my writing career with a minimum of turmoil.

But I have to admit that the world of Artificial Intelligence is setting me back on my heels a little. While many of my colleagues have embraced and are using it well, I’m setting aside January to catch up. Here’s my reading material, Teaching with AI.

I have my concerns. As a writer, I’m honestly worried about my students deferring to AI and not understanding the creativity needed for every kind of writing — an email, a news release, a report. Having an AI just generate these annoys every part of me.

But I’ve been teaching long enough to know that writing doesn’t come easily to everyone. Even as I teach my students to use programs like Grammarly or Microsoft Word’s editing tools on their papers means I already have been teaching them to use AI.

So as I prepare for my spring Essentials of Written Communication class, I will be rewriting my curriculum to continue to teach the formatting and structure of various types of writing, while planning for students to use AI. I plan to create assignments for them to write and then edit with AI; I’ll be showing them how their human touch is still vital to anything they use AI to create; I’ll be talking about the ethical use of AI so they understand its creative limitations (and potential for plagiarism).

As the book says, “It is essential that educators start to talk about these issues with students. if we want students to use AI responsibly, both in school and beyond, AI ethics must be baked into curriculum and include AI literacy, an emerging essential skill” (3).

Do you use AI? How has it helped you? What concerns do you have about its use?

6 thoughts on “My next teaching challenge: The AI effect

  1. Oh Linda. You brought up concerns I have had about AI. While I use it for searchs, I admit to still being wary about it, especially when people tell me how they use it to do things they consider annoying–like generating outlines. I consider these aspects important parts of the writing process. I’m glad you’re tackling the ethics of the use of AI.

  2. Linda, I’ve seen some innovative ways writers are using AI.

    For example, a children’s writer had a manuscript which was way too long for a typical picture book and we put it into chat/gpt and asked it to change it into a 32 page picture book (the standard size). The output needed some editorial work but it certainly pushed the writer in the right direction for perfecting his manuscript.

    Or if you have a book proposal with some competitive titles, I’ve had writers who have used AI to ask for a break down of the key elements in those competitive titles. The results come back in seconds and are not perfect but give assistance to something that would have taken hours to do without AI.

    Hope these ideas help you.

    Terry

  3. I have a friend who teaches for Duke University online and she recently (last fall?) began teaching a course about using AI. Crazy that people are using computers to…think.

    Carol R. Fielding
    814.528.8478
    Hometown Editor, Reporter ~ The Corry Journal
    Columnist ~ Titusville News-Journal

Leave a reply to unperfect gardener Cancel reply