Professors Find AI Most Useful for Lesson Plans, Discussions
September 10, 2023
This article by Brandon Paykamian was published on govtech.com on September 6, 2023.
As generative artificial intelligence (GAI) programs have continued to advance in the year since the first public launch of ChatGPT, college professors across the U.S. are finding them particularly useful for lesson planning, guiding classroom discussions, and demonstrating their own uses and limitations.
According to a recent news release from Purdue University, humanities and social sciences professor Stuart Collins at Purdue Global University has been using generative AI tools since December 2022 to prompt classroom discussions in his American government and civics courses, as well as in his research. As one recent example, Collins, also a member of Purdue Global's AI Task Force, used ChatGPT to highlight historical information about the U.S. debt ceiling amid 2023’s debt ceiling negotiations.
“I realized that 80-90 percent of the assignments I had created for my government and civics courses could now be readily answered by AI,” Collins said in a public statement. “That realization presented quite the problem. We are now thinking about how we can make our courses both AI-amplified and AI-resilient.”
When using AI tools like ChatGPT in classroom discussions and lessons, Collins said it’s important to remind students to double-check and verify information from generative AI. He said using generative AI in lessons serves two major purposes: prompting discussions on class topics and information literacy, and teaching students how to make use of AI tools responsibly and ethically as part of their studies.
“I think [GAI tools] can be really handy on the educator side of things for multiple reasons, like lesson planning ... It's a good way to expand horizons," he said. “I've also recommended students to ask ChatGPT questions … Then obviously, probably follow up and confirm with other sources, because ChatGPT and other AI systems can make some things up.”
“There’s a lot of interest on our campus in developing an EKU-specific chatbot to answer student questions that is driven by AI,” she said, noting that these chatbots have canned responses and are trained on more limited data sets than tools like ChatGPT.
“My hopes are that, as we educate the faculty on what generative AI is and what the capabilities are, that they can use it to streamline their administrative workload but also use it to refresh their lessons, their curriculum and their planning. During our recent generative AI pre-semester symposium, I demonstrated for instructors how you could [use GAI tools] to write the learning objectives for a General Chemistry I course," she said. "The GAI spits out a whole list of learning objectives and then you can actually look at those objectives. For me, it spit it out for an entire two-semester general chemistry course.”
In his own general psychology courses, Gurung said he’s given students instructions on how to use generative AI tools like ChatGPT on some assignments if they choose to do so, adding that students must note when they’ve used it and verify information for accuracy.
Like Collins and Korman, Gurung and Blue both stressed the importance of reminding students to fact-check answers from tools like ChatGPT. Blue noted that recent research from Stanford University and the University of California at Berkeley suggests that answers from ChatGPT 3.5 and 4 are sometimes less than reliable in subjects like physics and math.
Despite the current limits of GAI tools, Collins said he believes they will play an increasingly important role in higher-ed curriculum and lesson planning, classroom instruction and research. He added that as AI advances, its applications across industries will become more ubiquitous, making AI literacy a must for students across disciplines.
“If you're not using AI in your professional workspace, you're behind the curve,” he said.