学生和教师对学生写作中的人工智能生成的看法

Pub Date : 2024-09-10 DOI:10.1177/00986283241279401
Autumn B. Hostetter, Natalie Call, Grace Frazier, Tristan James, Cassandra Linnertz, Elizabeth Nestle, Miaflora Tucci
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景心理学教师经常布置包括个人反思在内的写作学习练习。生成式人工智能(GenAI)可以写出在其他领域可以冒充人类的文本。目标学生和教师对 GenAI 写的反思与学生写的反思的评价是否不同?学生和教师是否同意将 GenAI 用于大学写作的适当性?方法83 名学生和 82 名教师阅读了四篇反思(三篇由本科生撰写,一篇由 GenAI 撰写)。在对每篇反思的质量进行评分后,他们选择了哪一篇他们认为是人工智能生成的反思。然后,与会者对在大学写作中使用 GenAI 的九种潜在方式的道德性以及每种方式影响学习的可能性进行了评分。结果与会者对人工智能生成的反思的评分与学生生成的反思相似,并且未能可靠地检测出人工智能生成的写作。教师和学生一致认为,使用 GenAI 为学生生成最终文本可能比使用 GenAI 生成想法更不利于学习。与其实施 "一刀切 "的政策,教师不妨将课堂对话的重点放在 GenAI 如何影响学习上。
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Student and Faculty Perceptions of Generative Artificial Intelligence in Student Writing
BackgroundPsychology instructors frequently assign writing-to-learn exercises that include personal reflection. Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) can write text that passes for humans in other domains.ObjectiveDo students and faculty rate a reflection written by GenAI differently than reflections written by students? Do students and faculty agree about the appropriateness of using GenAI for college-level writing?MethodEighty-three students and 82 faculty read four reflections (three written by undergraduate students and one by GenAI). After rating the quality of each, they chose which one they thought was AI-generated. Participants then rated the ethicality of nine potential ways to use GenAI in college-level writing and the potential of each to compromise learning.ResultsParticipants rated the AI-generated reflection similarly to the student-generated reflections and failed to reliably detect AI-generated writing. Faculty and students agreed that using GenAI to produce the final text for a student likely compromises learning more than using it to generate ideas.ConclusionAI-generated reflections blend in with student-written reflections, and students and faculty agree about the potential detriments to learning.Teaching ImplicationsGenAI can be hard to detect in the psychology classroom. Rather than implementing one-size-fits-all policies, instructors might focus classroom conversations on how GenAI could compromise learning.
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