AI Resources for Faculty
AI Plagiarism Checkers
As students adapt to AI, it can be hard for teachers to spot AI-written papers or to demonstrate to students why they know that a paper was generated by AI.
Unfortunately, AI detection technology isn't that far along yet. As of June 2023, Turn It In's AI detection service was reported as generating false positives. These false positives generally harm students with low writing confidence or who are multilingual. Students who use Grammarly and other forms of AI-derived writing aids will have their essays flagged as AI-written by the tool.
For now, resources like CopyLeaks can be helpful in detecting AI, though your own analysis of the students writing and knowledge of their writing processes will always be the most reliable form of detection.
AI Prompts for Teaching
Educational Developer, Cynthia Alby, has created this resource for useful AI prompts for teaching.
(Please click the title above to follow the link to this resource.)
"What do teachers who assign writing need to know about AI text generators? How should we change our pedagogical practices, given the recent advances in AI Large Language Models (LLMs) such as OpenAI's GPT-3, as recently covered in The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Chronicle of Higher Education, and Inside Higher Ed? How should teachers participate in shaping policies around these technologies in our departments, institutions, and society?
As teachers who assign writing, we need to reckon with the possibility that our students may use writing generators to produce essays or parts of essays. These tools do not produce writing copied from human sources; the AI origin appears to be not reliably detectable either by human readers or by software.
To shape our individual and institutional responses to this new technology, writing teachers and scholars need more information about the kinds and quality of AI-generated text we can expect in response to common types of essay prompts. For example, we may want to design prompts that AI text generators are unskilled at performing, or we may want to find ways to use these generators pedagogically. Either way, as faculty responsible for teaching writing as impactful, ethical intellectual activity, we need to know what AI generators are capable of. And we need to understand the forms of bias and error that emerge in AI-generated writing."
AI Text Generators: Sources to Stimulate Discussion among Teachers
This is an open and evolving list put together by a writing teacher who is not an expert in the field, with suggestions from a few other more knowledgeable folks. I hope it can eventually be replaced by a curated list issued by a larger group of writing teachers affiliated with one or more of our professional organizations. Such a group will no doubt be established soon and tasked with providing guidance on AI text generators.
Please note that inclusion in this list does not indicate endorsement. Some of these resources include various forms of AI hype or claims that have not been verified. They are provided to give a general sense of the landscape of discourse around the topic.
2022-2023 AI Bibliography
Many of the links here are also included in the AI Text Generators document; however, my list is multi-disciplinary and includes articles for those involved in art, theater, musical composing, and legal issues, in addition to teaching.
If you have any articles you'd like me to add to the list, please send them to Julie.
Pedagogy Workshop: Adapting Writing & Media Composition Assignments for the Age of AI
This workshop will engage faculty in the exploration of the use of AI text and media-generation technologies in teaching and learning. The facilitators will begin with a presentation that will overview some of the issues with AI generation systems, demonstrate the strengths and weaknesses of these systems, share some current research about AI writing, including work the facilitators have done on human-AI collaboration; and talk about the implications of these systems for academic integrity policy.
The workshop will then provide an opportunity for participants to test out some of these systems using their own assignment prompts and will engage participants in discussion of some key questions, such as: What ethical and pedagogical concerns arise with the use of AI by students? What is an acceptable level of AI assistance (and does the answer depend on the course and/or disciplinary context)? Should we try to “AI-proof” writing and other media composition assignments? How should we revise/update our policies on academic integrity to account for these systems? And, finally, how might AI help us and our students in meeting learning outcomes?
Heidi McKee
James Porter
Facilitators
Professors Heidi A. McKee and James E. Porter teach professional writing/communication courses in the Departments of English and Emerging Technology in Business & Design at Miami University.
Their current collaborative research focuses on human-machine teaming and the rhetoric and ethics of AI-based writing systems, an inquiry that began with their co-authored 2017 book, Professional Communication and Network Interaction: A Rhetorical and Ethical Approach (Routledge).
In their most recent publication—"Team Roles and Rhetorical Intelligence in Human-Machine Writing" (2022)—McKee and Porter consider how humans might work with AI writing systems to help them become more "rhetorically intelligent" writing assistants.
Workshop Presentation
During this presentation, Drs. McKee and Porter discussed their research into AI composing technologies as well as their own experience in incorporating AI into their classes as part of their course polices and practices.
Workshop Activities
During the activities portions of the workshop, Drs. McKee and Porter asked participants to have AI respond to one of their essay assignment prompts and evaluate the way the AI responded. Other activities included having AI evaluate assignment prompts and thinking about ways to adapt our academic integrity policies for a world in which anything written by an AI is legally the student's writing.
Resources on AI & for the Workshop
In the sections below, we've included two articles from Drs. McKee and Porter that can help prepare you for the workshop in April.
We also include their bibliography from the workshop as well as the DLA's bibliography of recent news articles that discuss AI and that is subdivided by topic.
If you would like to see any other information or resources on artificial intelligence added to this site or to the AI bibliography, please contact Julie Perino.