logo
3 teachers tell us the changes they're making in the classroom to address students' rampant use of AI

3 teachers tell us the changes they're making in the classroom to address students' rampant use of AI

AI has made its way into the classroom. Along with it, concerns from teachers about student apathy.
"Some of the ones that I see using it all the time — I think if it wasn't there, they would just sit there looking blindly into space," Gary Ward, a physics, economics, and business teacher at Brookes Westshore High School in Victoria, British Columbia, told Business Insider.
Since the release of ChatGPT in 2022 and the mass adoption of it and other generative AI tools, concerns surrounding academic plagiarism have multiplied. Educators found themselves needing to react quickly, adapting their curriculums to embrace or counter a technology that had tremendous potential to both be a teaching aid and a " homework cheating machine."
Ward, who's been a teacher for about thirty years, said that he's noticed student usage of AI increase in increments — until this year, when it just "exploded."
"Literally, all students are using it this year," he said. In order to try and prevent students from gaming all of his assignments with artificial intelligence, Ward said he's begun to use it defensively. He's asked ChatGPT to help him develop work that would be harder for anyone completing it to feed back into an LLM.
"I just started it with a conversation in ChatGPT, and sort of iteratively went through — explained in my prompt what was happening, and said, 'This is what I want,'" Ward said. "It told me, 'These are things you can do to make it harder for students to be able to just answer with some large language model.' And typically, it's making it more personalized."
At Manchester Metropolitan University in Manchester, England, Richard Griffin — a lecturer in the business faculty specializing in project management and portfolio development — says a similar strategy is underway.
The university has developed an in-house system that educators can feed their assignments into, which will then provide an assessment of how difficult it might be to cheat it with AI and recommendations to make it more difficult to do so.
"The IT department have done their own tool which assesses how AI safe it is, or AI savvy it is, and will give you a bit of a grade to say, 'Well, really, you will need to adjust some of this,'" Griffin said. "It doesn't give us specific information, but it does give you a bit of a scroll to say, No, this isn't very safe. You need to add some deeper challenges here, or you need to make this more personal, etcetera."
A shift back toward analog assignments
The best defense against AI so far, according to Ward, is to spin back the clock a couple of decades.
"I've tried to sort of shift back toward some handwritten assignments, instead of having them do it on the computer," Ward said. "That way, I can tell this is how they're writing. I know it's theirs."
Even if Ward can't go analog for all the coursework he assigns, at the very least, it helps him determine a baseline for each student's writing, making it easier to determine when future work is produced synthetically.
"Now, yeah, it's expensive and it takes a lot of time to grade them, but I think that needs to continue," he added.
The goal of a classroom is generally to empower students with foundational skills — proficiency in research, deep thought, and comprehension, to name a few. By substituting the typical processes of studying with seeking out AI answers, many students are no longer meeting those benchmarks, said Paul Shockley, an assistant professor at Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches, Texas.
"Many students today are using AI as a way of fulfilling their assignments, and it is creating a loss of critical thinking, a loss of originality, a loss of discernment, a loss of personal reflection, and so on," said Shockley, who primarily teaches courses in philosophy and religious studies.
For Shockley's part, he was an early adopter of AI and was experimenting with the capabilities of LLMs soon after the launch of ChatGPT. He expects the technology not only to endure long-term, but to improve exponentially, and he began to believe it was crucial to help students build a healthy relationship with it.
"My mindset on the topic, since AI has emerged, has shifted, moved like a pendulum from fascination to fear, given how it may be used," Shockley said. "But my fascination with AI is rooted in what it may be able to ameliorate, ameliorate things in the energy sector, industry, natural environment, medicine, science, person-centered care, but I decided that I would be open to using AI and my pedagogy in a Socratic approach."
Originally, he developed an assignment for his undergraduate courses in philosophy and religious studies that encouraged students to dialogue with an LLM and analyze the output. He hoped that students would not only learn how to ask smarter questions but also develop a healthy skepticism of artificial intelligence.
He has since discontinued the assignment and no longer allows any use of AI in lower-level classes. Too many students, he found, used it to outright cheat — including one instance in which he said a student submitted a paper that cited a hallucinated quote from a book Shockley co-authored.
"The use of AI in the classroom for me as a philosopher is limited to inquiry among senior-level students doing research where they have maturity," Shockley said. "They have the chance to grow and so, and become equipped with critical thinking skills for themselves."
Some assignments are naturally more AI-resistant
Though Shockley still assigns research papers, he also tries to deploy "experiential" assignments whenever possible. For instance, in undergraduate environmental ethics and religious studies courses, Shockley has sent students out to visit local nature spots or religious sites.
He hopes to engage students, he added, by "hooking" them — connecting them more personally to the subject matter that they'll eventually interact with in more traditional ways. That way, they may be less likely to turn to AI to complete their work. Additionally, he's begun to attach reflective components to any assignments that could likely be gamed by AI on their own.
"What is it that students want? What is it that people want to experience these days?" he said. "What is it that young people want to experience these days, right? They want to have phenomenal experiences, you know, transformative experiences, cool experiences, and so, how can I harmonize those things together?"
Generally, certain disciplines are more insulated against AI cheating, given that they better lend themselves to project-based assignments. In Griffin's case, many of the business courses he teaches require actual interaction with a real-world client.
"We're challenging them with quite difficult tasks out in the real world to deliver projects for clients, you know, and there's a huge variety of expectation and understanding, both from the clients' perspective, but also from our sort of undergrads as well," Griffin said.
Much like Shockley, Griffin is focusing on incorporating reflection into his curriculum, hoping that the layered steps will prompt deeper thinking.
"I'm using projects and portfolios, so people are out in the real world. We're also relying very much on reflective aspects of that," Griffin said. "So they'll deliver a project with a client. If you're going to use AI and tell the client some really tough information, they're not going to be particularly happy.
"And then that reflective element means that they really have to delve deeper and give us some honesty, which wouldn't normally be there in normal sort of assignments or assessments," he added.
A shift toward oral assessments and discussion-based assignments, Griffin said, is also likely as AI continues to develop.
"So assessments, I don't know whether I'd say they're going to become harder," he said. "They'll certainly become more focused. I think we need to accept that. We maybe can't teach as broad a topic as we'd like to, but we can certainly teach criticality."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Says GPT-6 Is Already in Development
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Says GPT-6 Is Already in Development

Business Insider

time42 minutes ago

  • Business Insider

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Says GPT-6 Is Already in Development

Microsoft-backed (MSFT) AI firm OpenAI recently launched GPT-5, but CEO Sam Altman has already announced that GPT-6 is in development, and that it's coming sooner than expected. While he didn't give a release date, Altman made it clear that GPT-6 will be more advanced and personal. Indeed, it won't just respond to your questions but it will learn your preferences, habits, and personality to tailor its responses to you. According to Altman, the key to this personalization is memory. The system needs to remember who you are and what you like in order to offer a more meaningful experience. Elevate Your Investing Strategy: Take advantage of TipRanks Premium at 50% off! Unlock powerful investing tools, advanced data, and expert analyst insights to help you invest with confidence. Altman also said that future versions of ChatGPT will follow a new executive order from the Trump administration that requires federal AI tools to remain politically neutral but customizable. This means users will be able to adjust the AI's tone to match their views. At the same time, Altman admitted that GPT-5's initial rollout received backlash after users said that it felt cold and less helpful than earlier models. In response, OpenAI quietly updated the model to make its tone warmer, which is an improvement that Altman believes has made a big difference. Despite progress, there are still privacy concerns. In fact, Altman noted that temporary memory in ChatGPT isn't yet encrypted, which raises risks when handling sensitive information. Nevertheless, he said that encryption is likely coming, though no date has been set. In addition, when looking further ahead, Altman is exploring brain-computer interfaces, where AI could respond to your thoughts directly. However, while his team continues to improve ChatGPT for everyday use, Altman admitted that chatbot performance may have peaked for now. Is MSFT Stock a Buy? Turning to Wall Street, analysts have a Strong Buy consensus rating on MSFT stock based on 34 Buys and one Hold assigned in the last three months. In addition, the average MSFT price target of $623.60 per share implies 22.4% upside potential.

I just created 5 apps using GPT-5 and it's so easy it feels like it should be illegal — here's how to do it
I just created 5 apps using GPT-5 and it's so easy it feels like it should be illegal — here's how to do it

Tom's Guide

time3 hours ago

  • Tom's Guide

I just created 5 apps using GPT-5 and it's so easy it feels like it should be illegal — here's how to do it

If you've ever had an idea for an app but it's never gone past the brainstorming stage because you lacked coding skills, now is your chance to make your apps a reality. With ChatGPT-5, building an app is as simple as describing it. In other words, natural language is the new programming language, and you're no longer limited by your coding skills (or lack thereof) to go from concept to functional prototype in just a few minutes. During the live stream of the GPT-5 model's launch, Sam Altman and his team made coding look way too easy. As someone who did poorly in computer science class in college, I decided to put ChatGPT-5 to the what happened when I took five totally different app ideas, from a meme generator to a personal wellness journal, and asked ChatGPT-5 to build them from scratch. No coding. No wireframing. Just clear descriptions and a few follow-up questions. The results were wild. I created five working apps in less than 30 minutes — total! Complete with mobile builds, custom icons and working UI logic, the apps I developed were available in lite form (web only) and ready for mobile. Had I wanted, I could have used outside software and formatted them to be sold in the app store. While that might be next, here's a look at how it all works, what I built and why GPT-5 may have just changed how we develop software forever. MoodMate helps you process your feelings by turning quick notes into short reflections, complete with calming tips like breathing exercises. You type how you're feeling, and the AI responds with thoughtful insights to help you reset and reflect. It's like journaling, but with a built-in emotional coach and it takes less than a minute. Enter whatever ingredients you have on hand (even the random stuff) and SnackStack spins up three recipes you can actually make. Whether you've got eggs, spinach and hot sauce or just pasta and ketchup, this app finds a way. As a parent, I've been thinking about this one for a while. It's great this app is on mobile (and not just desktop) for story time on-the-go. Let your child choose a character, setting and lesson the story will teach. Then, watch as StorySpark generates a one-of-a-kind bedtime tale. It even reads the story aloud using your device's speech function. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. TaskTamer takes your big goal (write a novel, launch a side hustle, train for a 5K) and breaks it into weekly action plans. Just tell it your goal, timeline and how much time you can commit. It turns ambition into a step-by-step roadmap you can actually follow. Upload any image and MemeMachine instantly suggests six funny captions, complete with that classic meme-style formatting. You can tweak the text, move it around and download a ready-to-share meme in seconds. It's humor-on-demand with zero Photoshop skills required. The fastest way to test or share your app is to create a standalone HTML file. During the testing process, I created several different apps and immediately tried them by doing this version because you can quickly test the app by running it locall (no installs). Running the app in your browswer uses mock AI output for demoing and stores everything in your browser with localStorage This is perfect for user testing, internal previews or when mobile device setup isn't an option (e.g., slow Expo Go connections, locked-down Wi-Fi networks).Go this route if you just want to see your app in action and plan on only using it on your computer. If you think your app is so good that you want to upload to the Apple app store or Google Play, then this is the route for you. However, keep in mind there are a few extra steps. You'll need the following: For these tests, I created each app in the following versions: Same prompt. Same UI logic. Two completely different platforms. That's the power of GPT-5. All you need to do is describe your idea once and once it's built, you can deploy your app in any form, anywhere. If you are stuck with any of this because you have no idea where to start. Don't worry, GPT-5 will walk you through everything. You can upload screenshots or ask your questions directly and it will troubleshoot the entire process until you get your app uploaded to the app store of your choice. The leap in simplicity comes from three things: When I first started creating my apps and GPT-5 started throwing words at me like "localStorage," "Expo Go," and "download folder location" (okay, I knew that one), I wondered if any of this was worth it. So, when I got frustrated I let the AI know. It responded by telling me it would "go slower" and that it was "here to help every step of the way." That was reassuring even though I was still feeling like my minimal coding skills would never allow these apps to come to fruition. But, GPT-5 urged me to stay the course and since it has the patience of a non-human, we were in it to win it. Ultimately, generating five ready-to-use apps. GPT-5 turns app building into something as easy as writing an email. You describe what you want, it creates a prototype. You tweak the tone, logic or UX in plain English, and it rebuilds it. The hardest part isn't the coding anymore, it's coming up with the ideas, which GPT-5 can help with, too. So if you've ever said 'I wish there was an app that…' — guess what? There can be. In about five minutes. Follow Tom's Guide on Google News to get our up-to-date news, how-tos, and reviews in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button.

The White House just joined TikTok a month before it's set to be banned (again)
The White House just joined TikTok a month before it's set to be banned (again)

Business Insider

time6 hours ago

  • Business Insider

The White House just joined TikTok a month before it's set to be banned (again)

A lot can change in a year — just ask TikTok. Last year, the US government took the extraordinary step of voting to ban the popular app used by millions of Americans, citing national security concerns. On Tuesday, the White House became its latest user. The White House TikTok account launched with a video montage of President Donald Trump narrated by the man himself. "Every day I wake up determined to deliver a better life for the people all across this nation," Trump says over images of him with UFC head Dana White, law enforcement officers, and American workers. "I am your voice!" The account's second post featured various shots of the White House during different seasons. The White House joined the app less than a month before it's set to be banned in the US on September 17 unless it's sold to a US buyer, though that deadline has already been extended several times. "The Trump administration is committed to communicating the historic successes President Trump has delivered to the American people with as many audiences and platforms as possible," Karoline Leavitt, White House press secretary, said in a statement to Business Insider. "President Trump's message dominated TikTok during his presidential campaign, and we're excited to build upon those successes and communicate in a way no other administration has before." The White House did not respond to questions about whether the divest-or-ban deadline would be extended again or if a deal was expected by the deadline. Lawmakers in April 2024 voted to ban TikTok unless its China-based parent company, ByteDance, sold its American assets. Some officials cited concerns that sensitive data belonging to American users could end up in the hands of the Chinese government, and members of Congress have said it could be used for Chinese Communist Party propaganda. TikTok has said it does not share data with the Chinese government. The TikTok divest-or-ban law, signed by President Joe Biden last year, gave TikTok until January 19 to sell or risk shutting down. The app briefly went dark that day for US-based users before coming back online, with TikTok crediting Trump for its return. The White House has said the president does not want TikTok to go dark and prefers it be sold. Trump has delayed the divest-or-ban deadline three times since taking office in January. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told CNBC last month that TikTok will go dark again unless China agrees to a deal that will give Americans control over the app. "We've made the decision. You can't have Chinese control and have something on 100 million American phones," Lutnick said, adding that China's decision would be coming "very soon."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store