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Critical AI by Charles Logan | LinkedIn
Critical AI by Charles Logan | LinkedIn
This week has emphasized that now is the time for reimagining what critical AI education might look like in the coming months and years, an education that eschews industry-captured AI literacy lessons for an expansive, interdisciplinary civics education with an emphasis on digital degrowth and data center resistance.
·linkedin.com·
Critical AI by Charles Logan | LinkedIn
“What Are We Really Assessing?” Rethinking Evidence of Learning in the Age of AI
“What Are We Really Assessing?” Rethinking Evidence of Learning in the Age of AI
This piece builds on earlier reflections I’ve shared about responsible, transparent and learning-focused use of AI in SACE assessments, extending that thinking into the wider question of how we gather trustworthy evidence of learning. A few weeks ago, in a curriculum meeting, a HASS (Humanities and
·linkedin.com·
“What Are We Really Assessing?” Rethinking Evidence of Learning in the Age of AI
Time, emotions and moral judgements: how university students position GenAI within their study
Time, emotions and moral judgements: how university students position GenAI within their study
The emergence of Generative AI (GenAI) in higher education has prompted considerable discussion within the research community. Despite their centrality, students’ perspectives remain underexplored....
·tandfonline.com·
Time, emotions and moral judgements: how university students position GenAI within their study
"I had one friend who told a colleague that he was going across campus to an Al workshop, and the other professors said, 'Don't, we're leading a boycott against the workshop.' Okay. I mean, I don't… | Mike Caulfield
"I had one friend who told a colleague that he was going across campus to an Al workshop, and the other professors said, 'Don't, we're leading a boycott against the workshop.' Okay. I mean, I don't… | Mike Caulfield
"I had one friend who told a colleague that he was going across campus to an Al workshop, and the other professors said, 'Don't, we're leading a boycott against the workshop.' Okay. I mean, I don't remember that kind of thing happening with Wikipedia or other tools for online learning..." For me at least, it's pretty simple. People are using these tools, and they are using them poorly. We are educators and if we can teach them to use them more effectively we should. If we refuse to do that, where we end up as a society is at least a little bit on us. But I disagree with Bryan a bit. We went through this before in miniature. In 2010 I was trying to convince people in civic education conferences we should teach people to use social media more effectively, including checking things online. The most common response "We shouldn't be teaching social media, we should be telling students to subscribe to physical newspapers instead." Those students we could have taught that year are thirty-five now. We could have had 15 cohorts of college students knowing how to check the truth of what they see online. Our entire history might be different, and maybe we wouldn't be seeing this rampant conspiracism. The thing is those professors who said we should just give students physical papers will never realize their role in getting us here. I wish others would consider that history before they treat boycotts of AI workshops like a noble act. When you engage in politics you are judged by results, not intentions. And the results of this approach are not risk free.
·linkedin.com·
"I had one friend who told a colleague that he was going across campus to an Al workshop, and the other professors said, 'Don't, we're leading a boycott against the workshop.' Okay. I mean, I don't… | Mike Caulfield
Where does human thinking end and AI begin? An AI authorship protocol aims to show the difference
Where does human thinking end and AI begin? An AI authorship protocol aims to show the difference
Students – and all manner of professionals – are tempted to outsource their thinking to AI, which threatens to undermine learning and credibility. A philosophy professor offers a solution.
·theconversation.com·
Where does human thinking end and AI begin? An AI authorship protocol aims to show the difference
#facultydevelopment #ai #edtech | Daniel Stanford
#facultydevelopment #ai #edtech | Daniel Stanford
In January 2024, I asked an auditorium full of community college instructors to tell me which stage of grief resonated most when they thought about their relationship with AI. Here's what they said: 7%: Denial - AI is overrated. I'll just wait it out. 15%: Anger - AI is running amok and undermines critical thinking. 38%: Bargaining - I'd learn more about AI if I wasn't so darn busy. 3%: Depression - What I love about teaching is slipping away. 38%: Acceptance - I'm ready! Where's my AI teaching assistant? How do you think the results would shift if you posed this question to faculty today? Do you think your colleagues are feeling significantly *more* or *less* optimistic about AI than they were a year or two ago? If so, why? #facultydevelopment #ai #edtech
·linkedin.com·
#facultydevelopment #ai #edtech | Daniel Stanford
Teaching AI as an Anti-AI Librarian
Teaching AI as an Anti-AI Librarian
Editor’s Note: Please join us in welcoming Eleanor Ball, Information Literacy & Liaison Librarian and Assistant Professor of Instruction at the University of Northern Iowa, as a new First Year Academic Librarian Experience blogger for the 2025-26 year here at ACRLog. I’m about as anti-AI as they come. I’ve never used it, and I’m ethically
·acrlog.org·
Teaching AI as an Anti-AI Librarian
At this point I'm really just confused.
At this point I'm really just confused.
At this point I'm really just confused. Do people not realize how many college courses are being taught fully online, and of those, how many are fully asynchronous? "While comprehensive restructuring in higher ed will take time, triage must be administered right now. Institutions must apply a tourniquet to stem the hemorrhaging of college credibility. They must prohibit traditional take-home essays until effective, verifiable safeguards are in place. To fail to do so is no longer pedagogically outdated; it’s ethically indefensible." More than 50% of college students take at least one course online. This trends higher at community colleges (no shocker there), because those students need the most flexibility to complete their degrees while working and caring for families. Online asynchronous courses run on a much higher level of student autonomy and self-motivation and have for decades. We don't need clueless generalizations. We do need help. #Faculty are deeply struggling. I have been teaching online for twenty years. This has been the hardest term of my teaching career. We do need help. We need help in redesigning our courses. We need to be paid to do those redesigns. We need consistent support with obvious and flagrant academic integrity violations that harm students, faculty, and institutions. We need help. What is also "ethically indefensible" is the utter lack of understanding of how the majority of non-traditional students are able to complete their coursework. I need folks to realize that losing online learning would rip college access away from millions of non-traditional (what I call new-traditional) college students. I agree with this article that higher ed's very foundations are at risk. But we can't save it by sacrificing access. #HigherEd https://lnkd.in/eAG4rudV
·linkedin.com·
At this point I'm really just confused.
AI-text-detectors can be evaded using simple tricks in academic writing, as repeatedly shown by folks like Dr Mike Perkins and Dr Mark A.
AI-text-detectors can be evaded using simple tricks in academic writing, as repeatedly shown by folks like Dr Mike Perkins and Dr Mark A.
AI-text-detectors can be evaded using simple tricks in academic writing, as repeatedly shown by folks like Dr Mike Perkins and Dr Mark A. Bassett. Advice for how to do this is abundant on YouTube, in videos aimed at students, viewed millions of times. Some videos are about how to ‘cheat’, but others have more positive titles like ‘how to study with AI’. Is there any point trying to stop students using AI to write essays? Or even any value to using asynchronous written essays as summative assessments?   New paper from the great Tomas Foltynek and some bloke called Phil Newton   https://rdcu.be/eKCko
·linkedin.com·
AI-text-detectors can be evaded using simple tricks in academic writing, as repeatedly shown by folks like Dr Mike Perkins and Dr Mark A.
Professors Fear AI Will Rot Students’ Brains. The Research Shows It’s More Complicated Than That.
Professors Fear AI Will Rot Students’ Brains. The Research Shows It’s More Complicated Than That.
Learning is a complex process — and so is measuring it. Though research shows we have cause to be concerned about what happens when students use AI, the devil is in the details.
·chronicle.com·
Professors Fear AI Will Rot Students’ Brains. The Research Shows It’s More Complicated Than That.
Latest IJEI article is out! “Exploring the nexus of academic integrity and artificial intelligence in higher education: a bibliometric analysis”
Latest IJEI article is out! “Exploring the nexus of academic integrity and artificial intelligence in higher education: a bibliometric analysis”
The International Journal for Educational Integrity has published a new significant article analyzing the intersection of academic integrity and artificial intelligence in higher education. Conduct…
·drsaraheaton.com·
Latest IJEI article is out! “Exploring the nexus of academic integrity and artificial intelligence in higher education: a bibliometric analysis”
How Are Students Really Using AI?
How Are Students Really Using AI?

h/t Julie Cowen

So, what do the data tell us? Many, but not all, students use AI, and it’s getting more common. Students are ambivalent about AI and get mixed messages from professors and institutions. Students think institutions should incorporate AI more, but they are wary of having it replace teaching. And AI use can facilitate learning but also seriously harm learning if it’s not carefully and intentionally implemented. We need to keep these conclusions in mind, and keep an eye on what further research will tell us, as AI continues its relentless march into our classrooms.”

·chronicle.com·
How Are Students Really Using AI?