Reflective writing assignments in the era of GenAI: student behavior and attitudes suggest utility, not futility.

IF 1.7 4区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES
Advances in Physiology Education Pub Date : 2025-06-01 Epub Date: 2025-04-18 DOI:10.1152/advan.00241.2024
Tori N Stranges, Meaghan J MacNutt
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Reflective writing is widely used in health sciences education, but overreliance on generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) could undermine the reflective writing process. To explore this concern, students in three undergraduate courses with reflective writing assignments and policies permitting GenAI use were asked to retrospectively and anonymously self-report their GenAI-related behaviors and attitudes. Only 33% of respondents (n = 310) reported ever using GenAI on a reflective writing assignment. Among GenAI users, 81% reported that usage was motivated by learning, efficiency, and/or (to a significantly lesser extent) grades. Eighty-six percent of users reported benefits to learning, efficiency, and/or grades, but 10% reported that learning was hindered by using GenAI. Most GenAI users (83%) believed their usage of GenAI was ethical, and only 4% regretted their use. Notably, 19% of users and 38% of nonusers wished they had used GenAI more. Overall, only four assignments (representing 1.3% of respondents and 0.3% of submissions) were reportedly "mostly written by GenAI." Instead, most students reported using GenAI selectively and in ways that were supportive rather than substitutive of their own reflective process. This finding inspires optimism that reflective writing assignments have retained their pedagogical value in the early GenAI era and that most students are well intentioned in their usage of GenAI. Heterogeneity in self-reported student behavior, motivations, and perceptions of GenAI's benefits and harms highlights the need for further research into factors influencing GenAI adoption and usage. Understanding and responding to this diversity will be crucial for developing inclusive and equitable strategies to help maximize GenAI's benefits while minimizing its harms.NEW & NOTEWORTHY We examined students' use of GenAI tools to complete reflective writing assignments in health and exercise science courses where these tools were permitted. Findings do not support common concerns about student overuse and misuse of GenAI tools. Instead, we provide evidence that students are using GenAI tools selectively and in ways they believe to be ethical and supportive of their learning. Tremendous variability in student behavior and attitudes warrants further consideration.

GenAI时代的反思性写作作业:学生的行为和态度表明有用,而不是无用。
反思性写作广泛用于健康科学教育,但过度依赖生成式人工智能(GenAI)可能会破坏反思性写作过程。为了探究这一问题,研究人员要求学生在三门具有反思性写作任务和允许使用GenAI的政策的本科课程中回顾性和匿名地自我报告他们与GenAI相关的行为和态度。只有33%的受访者(n = 310)报告在反思性写作作业中使用过GenAI。在GenAI用户中,81%的用户报告使用GenAI的动机是学习、效率和/或(在较小程度上)成绩。86%的用户报告了学习、效率和/或成绩方面的好处,但10%的用户报告说使用GenAI阻碍了学习。大多数GenAI用户(83%)认为他们使用GenAI是合乎道德的,只有4%的人后悔使用了GenAI。值得注意的是,19%的用户和38%的非用户希望他们更多地使用GenAI。总体而言,只有四份作业(占受访者的1.3%和提交的0.3%)“主要由GenAI撰写”。相反,大多数学生报告说,他们有选择地使用GenAI,并以支持而不是替代他们自己的反思过程的方式使用。这一发现激发了人们的乐观情绪,即反思性写作作业在早期GenAI时代保留了其教学价值,并且大多数学生使用GenAI的意图是良好的。自我报告的学生行为、动机和对GenAI利弊的看法的异质性突出了对影响GenAI采用和使用的因素进行进一步研究的必要性。理解和应对这种多样性对于制定包容性和公平的战略至关重要,有助于使GenAI的利益最大化,同时将其危害降到最低。在允许使用GenAI工具的健康和运动科学课程中,我们调查了学生使用GenAI工具来完成反思性写作作业的情况。研究结果不支持对学生过度使用和误用GenAI工具的普遍担忧。相反,我们提供的证据表明,学生正在选择性地使用GenAI工具,并以他们认为合乎道德和支持他们学习的方式使用。学生行为和态度的巨大变化值得进一步考虑。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
19.00%
发文量
100
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Advances in Physiology Education promotes and disseminates educational scholarship in order to enhance teaching and learning of physiology, neuroscience and pathophysiology. The journal publishes peer-reviewed descriptions of innovations that improve teaching in the classroom and laboratory, essays on education, and review articles based on our current understanding of physiological mechanisms. Submissions that evaluate new technologies for teaching and research, and educational pedagogy, are especially welcome. The audience for the journal includes educators at all levels: K–12, undergraduate, graduate, and professional programs.
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