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Hagit Meishar-Tal – TechTrends: Linking Research and Practice to Improve Learning, 2024
This paper critically analyzes the potential impact of ChatGPT, a creative artificial intelligence tool, on learning and teaching, focusing on its impact on using writing assignments as a means of assessing knowledge. The paper examines the challenges this tool presents to learners and teachers in various aspects, including writing as a means of…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Educational Technology, Barriers, Writing (Composition)
Kong Chen; April C. Tallant; Ian Selig – Information and Learning Sciences, 2025
Purpose: Current knowledge and research on students' utilization and interaction with generative artificial intelligence (AI) tools in their academic work is limited. This study aims to investigate students' engagement with these tools. Design/methodology/approach: This research used survey-based research to investigate generative AI literacy…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Higher Education, College Students, Technology Integration
James W. Drisko – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2025
The rise of AI generated texts offers promise but creates new challenges for social work teaching. A recent survey found that 89% of higher education students used AI on their homework. AI generated text may be difficult to distinguish from a student's own work, yet are being submitted as the student's own work. This poses new challenges to…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Social Work, Counselor Training, Artificial Intelligence
Catherine Nickerson; Peter Davidson – Business and Professional Communication Quarterly, 2024
In this discussion, we consider how the use of scenario-based assessment (SBA) can provide students with a way of developing the digital communication skills that business communication research has found they will need for the workplace, alongside other aspects of professional competence. This is because SBA can be employed to engage learners in…
Descriptors: Vignettes, Student Evaluation, Digital Literacy, Skill Development
Laura Key; Chris Till; Joe Maxwell – Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education, 2024
This paper introduces a project to develop a digital academic writing tool at Leeds Beckett University (LBU). Essay X-ray is an interactive online tool designed to help students get to grips with the structure and style of academic writing and was developed using the Articulate Storyline 360 platform. The aim was to expand LBU's academic skills…
Descriptors: Essays, Writing (Composition), Academic Language, Writing Assignments
Guy J. Krueger – Thresholds in Education, 2025
Generative AI has become a quotidian discussion topic in many writing departments, and the conversations often focus on the negative aspects or the disruptions it has caused. A growing number of teachers and scholars, though, have embraced the new technology and welcomed it into their classrooms. In the Spring 2024 semester, students in my…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Artificial Intelligence, Computer Software, Technology Integration
Heather Johnston; Maria Eaton; Isabel Henry; Eva-Marie Deeley; Bryony N. Parsons – Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education, 2025
The aim of this project was to identify ways in which students are using Generative Artificial Intelligence (GAI) technologies for the planning and researching stage of essay style assignments. The study recruited 30 students from various subject areas and levels of study and with different self-reported levels of confidence in using GAI tools.…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education, Writing (Composition), Academic Language
Holly Ryan; Daniel Abramov; Samantha Acker; Sydney Elkins – Thresholds in Education, 2025
This paper explores the complexities of co-authorship involving generative AI in academic contexts, focusing on an honors English class where students engaged with AI tools like ChatGPT. It critiques the boundaries of authorship as defined by COPE, which argues AI cannot be an author due to its lack of accountability. The study explores the…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Writing (Composition), Honors Curriculum, English Instruction
Jude Brady; Martina Kuvalja; Alison Rodrigues; Sarah Hughes – Research Matters, 2024
This study explores undergraduate students' use of ChatGPT when writing essays. Three students were tasked with writing two essays each for a coursework component for a Cambridge qualification facilitated by access to ChatGPT. After writing the essays, they participated in semi-structured interviews about their experiences of using the technology.…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education, Undergraduate Students, Writing (Composition)
Alec Thomson – Community College Enterprise, 2024
Artificial intelligence tools have presented many challenges and opportunities to transform teaching and learning on college campuses. These changes are significant enough to require colleges to take action to create a framework by which faculty and students can navigate the proper usage of these tools. Rather than working to create entirely new…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Information Technology, Position Papers, Educational Policy
Dirk H. R. Spennemann; Jessica Biles; Lachlan Brown; Matthew F. Ireland; Laura Longmore; Clare L. Singh; Anthony Wallis; Catherine Ward – Interactive Technology and Smart Education, 2024
Purpose: The use of generative artificial intelligence (genAi) language models such as ChatGPT to write assignment text is well established. This paper aims to assess to what extent genAi can be used to obtain guidance on how to avoid detection when commissioning and submitting contract-written assignments and how workable the offered solutions…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Natural Language Processing, Technology Uses in Education, Cheating
Irena Miljkovic Krecar; Maja Kolega; Lana Jurcec – IAFOR Journal of Education, 2024
In the context of education, the issues of integrating artificial intelligence (AI) into teaching and maintaining academic integrity in students' use of AI are particularly relevant. This paper empirically examined the issue of ChatGPT usage for writing homework from the perspectives of students and professors. Study research methods included both…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Computer Software, Synchronous Communication, Student Attitudes
Melissa A. Otero – ProQuest LLC, 2024
With the advent of ChatGPT and other artificial intelligence (AI) tools, students have a new instrument that can create writing samples for them, making it easy to violate academic integrity. A constructivist grounded theory multiple-case study was conducted to address faculty perceptions of ChatGPT as a tool for learning and teaching instead of a…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Computer Software, Synchronous Communication, Cheating
Chad C. Tossell; Nathan L. Tenhundfeld; Ali Momen; Katrina Cooley; Ewart J. de Visser – IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies, 2024
This article examined student experiences before and after an essay writing assignment that required the use of ChatGPT within an undergraduate engineering course. Utilizing a pre-post study design, we gathered data from 24 participants to evaluate ChatGPT's support for both completing and grading an essay assignment, exploring its educational…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Computer Software, Artificial Intelligence, Grading
Andrew Williams – International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education, 2024
The value of generative AI tools in higher education has received considerable attention. Although there are many proponents of its value as a learning tool, many are concerned with the issues regarding academic integrity and its use by students to compose written assessments. This study evaluates and compares the output of three commonly used…
Descriptors: Content Area Writing, Artificial Intelligence, Writing Assignments, Biomedicine
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