我的同学确实在拥抱AI,但批评者们忽略了问题的关键

我的同学确实在拥抱AI,但批评者们忽略了问题的关键

2025-07-02Technology
--:--
--:--
王小二
早上好,我是王小二。欢迎收听我们的 <Goose Pod>。今天又是元气满满的一天。
Ema
嗨,我是 Ema!今天我们来聊个有点“烫手”的话题:学生用AI,到底是不是我们想的那么简单?
王小二
嗯,很多人一听就觉得是“作弊”。但我们会从一个学生的视角,聊聊这背后更复杂的教育问题。那么,准备好了吗?
王小二
Ema,我们先从现象聊起吧。大学里用AI到底有多普遍?很多人想的可能是,学生都在用它写作业,不好好学习了。
Ema
嗯,这确实是主流的批评。但现实嘛,总要复杂一些。有调查说,青少年用ChatGPT做作业的比例,两年就翻了一番。听着很吓人,但这不完全等于作弊。
王小二
翻了一番?这可真够快的。那他们到底用AI做什么呢?如果不是作弊,难道是把它当成…一个高级计算器?
Ema
哈哈,差不多是这个意思!就像文章作者Elsie说的,她的同学普遍觉得AI是个学习辅助工具。比如,做初步研究,或者帮忙理理论文结构。更像个智能研究助理。
王小二
我明白了。这就像我们当年从手写换成电脑打字。当然,滥用的风险肯定是有的,这个不能忽视。
Ema
完全正确!但焦点不该只是“作弊”。我们得问,为什么学生这么快就接受了AI?这背后,其实是整个教育系统正在经历一场“大地震”。
王小二
对,这才是关键。我们不能简单地给学生贴上“懒惰”的标签。得去理解,是什么样的环境,让他们觉得用AI是个理性的选择。
Ema
没错!这就像看见有人雨中狂奔,你不该只说他姿势不好看,而是该抬头看看,是不是暴雨要来了。对现在的学生来说,这场“大雨”已经下了很久了。
王小二
这个比喻很形象。Elsie的文章就提供了一个很好的内部视角。她自己因为考试全是闭卷,加上担心AI数据中心的能耗问题,所以她本人用得很少。
Ema
这恰恰说明她看得很全面。她不是在为AI辩护,而是在呼吁大家关注一个更大的问题:是什么把学生推到了这一步?这背后的教育背景到底发生了什么?
王小二
是的,她提出了一个很有力的观点:要想理解学生为何拥抱AI,就必须先理解他们所处的教育环境。这自然就把我们带到了下一个话题:这一切的背景是什么?
王小二
要说背景,得把时钟拨回2020年3月。文章作者Elsie当时快15岁,学校因疫情关闭时,大家都以为只是个两周的“惊喜”假期。
Ema
是啊,谁能想到,那之后是三年的混乱。那一年,英国的“高考”和“中考”都取消了,换成了教师评估。结果呢?对那些顶尖私校的学生特别有利。
王小二
没错。到了2021年,官方又犹豫了很久,最后再次取消大考。这意味着,整整两届学生,都没经历过传统意义的全国大考。这对他们的应试能力是个巨大打击。
Ema
可以想象,这就像运动员两年没下水训练,突然就要去参加奥运会了。Elsie所在的2023届考生,就成了第一批恢复“正常”考试的学生。
王小二
而这个所谓的“正常”,其实一点也不正常。为了纠正前两年的“成绩膨胀”,2023年的评分标准变得异常严格,像是一种惩罚。很多学生的成绩远低于预期。
Ema
是的,这批学生就带着这样的经历进了大学。而大学本身,在疫情中也很挣扎。学生回不来,传统的闭卷考试没法进行,只能转向在线、开卷的考核。
王小二
这个影响非常深远。Elsie给出一个数据:疫情五年后,现在还有70%的英国大学在用某种在线考核。这并不是因为课程变简单了。
Ema
那是因为什么呢?
王小二
是因为大学必须面对一个现实:现在大部分本土学生,都没有完整的全国大考经验。这不仅是知识点缺失,更是心理上的不适应。
Ema
完全正确。而且从2020年开始,政府在考试形式上反复无常,在学生心里埋下了一颗巨大的“不确定性”的种子。这才是最麻烦的。
王小二
Elsie自己的经历就是个好例子。她大一,一半考试在线。到了大二,突然全变回了手写闭卷。而这些变化,她都是在学年中途才接到通知。
Ema
天啊,这太折磨人了!备考策略完全不同啊。更夸张的是,和她考同一份卷子的大三学生,却被允许在线开卷考。理由竟然是,那些大三学生没参加过手写考试!
王小二
你看,这种不一致性,不仅存在于不同大学,甚至在同一所大学、同一门课的不同年级之间,都存在着。这给学生带来强烈的不公平感。
Ema
就在这样一个混乱又不确定的系统里,ChatGPT在2022年横空出世。它就像一块磁铁,立刻吸引了那些感觉无助的学生。它提供了一种确定性。
王小二
总结得很好。所以,AI的崛起,恰好填补了后疫情时代教育系统的一个巨大真空。考试制度本身已经变得如此多变,这让大学更难有效监管AI的使用。
Ema
是的。所以,讨论AI问题如果脱离了这个大背景,那所有的讨论,都只是在隔靴搔痒。
Ema
说到冲突,这事儿的矛盾点就特别突出。一方面,公众和媒体普遍认为用AI就是作弊。有调查说,三分之一的大学生承认在作业里用AI。
王小二
嗯,更有趣的是,同一份调查里,75%的学生承认,他们知道用AI作弊是错的。但还是会用,因为觉得教授根本发现不了。这本身就很矛盾。
Ema
是的,这就像明知道闯红灯不对,但看大家都在闯,就跟着走了。但另一方面的冲突,也是学生面临的现实困境,这可能就是批评者们忽略的。
王小二
你是指社会经济压力,对吗?他们总觉得学生待在象牙塔里。但现实是,68%的英国学生有兼职工作,这是十年来的最高比例。
Ema
十年最高!这个数字太有冲击力了。学生真正能用来学习的时间,比以前少太多了。他们得打工来付学费和生活费。AI能省时间,那吸引力当然是致命的。
王小二
没错。这已经不是选择题,而是生存题了。当你的精力被兼职大量占据,你会怎么做?这背后反映的,是大学系统本身出了问题。
Ema
除了打工,还有债务。Elsie提到,她这届学生,是第一批要用40年而不是30年来还学生贷款的。一毕业就背上一笔要还到退休的债,压力太大了。
王小二
所以,冲突的本质就清楚了。一边是“学术诚信”的道德要求,另一边是“生存困境”的现实压力。当系统把学生推到生存线挣扎时,再指责他们就不太公平了。
Ema
而且,这种冲突在大学内部也存在。有学者说,大学现在面对AI是“一团糟”,充满了困惑、否认和恐惧。教授们也很挣扎。
王小二
是啊,教授们也很难。一方面要维护学术标准,另一方面,AI检测工具又不可靠,误判风险很高。错怪一个学生,后果可能很严重。
Ema
这让我想起一个观点,AI动摇了整个教育评估体系的基础。如果教授分不清作业是不是原创,那考试、论文这些传统方式还有什么意义?这是更深层的危机。
王小二
所以,真正的冲突点在于:我们是该把责任更多地放在学生身上,还是该放在教育系统的设计者身上,要求他们创造一个更公平、稳定的环境?
王小二
说到影响,最直接的就是学生。持续的不确定性,对学生的心理和学习状态造成了极大的负面影响。他们感到焦虑,对教育系统的信任也减弱了。
Ema
是的,这种感觉太糟了。当规则总在变,有人能“走捷径”,那对认真遵守规则的学生来说,就是一种打击。整个学习风气都会被破坏。
王小二
从宏观层面看,这对高等教育的公信力也是冲击。如果大学学位的“含金量”受质疑,人们会问:现在的毕业生到底掌握了什么真实能力?
Ema
没错。这也迫使我们去想,大学的核心价值到底是什么?如果只是传授知识,AI可能做得更好。大学是不是该更侧重于培养批判性思维、创造力这些AI无法取代的能力?
王小二
这是个非常深刻的问题。同时,我们也不能忽略Elsie提到的另一个影响,就是AI技术本身的环境成本。运行那些大模型,其实非常消耗水电资源。
Ema
这个视角很重要!这说明学生们并非不加思考地接受新技术。像Elsie一样,他们也在批判性地审视技术。这恰恰证明了他们有批判性思维。
王小二
是的。另外,对教职员工的影响也很大。教授们现在压力也很大,不仅要重新设计课程,还得扮演“侦探”的角色,去甄别学生是否作弊,这太耗费心力了。
Ema
完全同意。这一切都指向一个核心问题:我们到底希望大学教育实现什么目标?AI像一面镜子,照出了我们教育体系中早已存在的裂痕。
王小二
说得好。这种冲击是痛苦的,但也可能是一个契机。那么,面向未来,我们该怎么办呢?这或许是更有建设性的思考。
Ema
没错,与其抱怨,不如向前看。关于未来,Elsie的文章结尾建议很务实。她认为最重要的一步是:大学需要选择一种考试形式,然后,坚持下去!
王小二
是的,稳定性和可预测性,是消除学生不安全感的基石。只有当规则清晰稳定,学生才能把精力真正投入到学习本身。这是治本之策。
Ema
在稳定规则的基础上,如果大学决定用开卷考试,那就要提供关于AI使用的清晰指导。“不许作弊”这种模糊的话没用。得明确什么程度的AI使用是可接受的。
王小二
我非常赞同。我们不能假装AI不存在,而是要主动引导。就像教学生如何引用文献一样,我们也该教他们如何规范地使用AI作为辅助工具。
Ema
是的,未来的教育,不应该是“防堵AI”,而应该是“拥抱AI”。比如用AI做个性化辅导,或者用它分析数据,识别有风险的学生并及时干预。AI也能是强大的教学工具。
王小二
这才是真正有潜力的方向。最后,我想引用Elsie文章结尾那句话:“无论好坏,人工智能将继续存在。不是因为学生懒惰,而是因为‘作为一名学生’的意义,正与科技一样在飞速变化。”
王小二
好了,今天的讨论差不多到这里了。我们从一个学生的视角,聊了聊AI在大学的普及现象,发现这远非简单的“作弊”二字可以概括。
Ema
没错,考试制度的不稳,和学生日益加剧的经济压力,共同把AI推到了聚光灯下。未来的关键,在于教育系统如何自我革新。
王小二
今天的 <Goose Pod> 就到这里。感谢你的收听,希望我们的讨论能给你带来一些新的思考。
Ema
明天见!

Here is a comprehensive summary of the news article. ### Summary of News Report | | | |---|---| | **Title** | It’s true that my fellow students are embracing AI – but this is what the critics aren’t seeing | | **Source** | The Guardian (Opinion Piece) | | **Author** | Elsie McDowell (Student and 2023 Hugo Young award winner) | | **Publication Date** | June 29, 2025 | --- ### Overview In this opinion piece, student Elsie McDowell argues that the widespread adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools like ChatGPT among university students is not primarily driven by laziness or a desire to cheat. Instead, she posits it is a rational response to a deeply flawed post-COVID education system characterized by profound uncertainty, inconsistent assessment methods, and mounting financial pressures. The author contends that to understand the rise of AI, critics must look at the systemic failures that have left students feeling unsupported and "on the back foot." ### Key Findings and Arguments The author builds her case by connecting the educational disruptions of the pandemic to the current academic and economic landscape for students. **1. The Post-COVID Educational Context:** * The author's generation experienced unprecedented disruption to their secondary education, with the cancellation of national exams (GCSEs and A-levels) in 2020 and 2021. * This was followed by a "punitive crackdown on grade inflation" when in-person exams returned in 2023, leaving many students with lower-than-expected grades. * Consequently, a large cohort of students entered higher education without the typical experience of sitting formal, high-stakes, handwritten exams. **2. Inconsistent and Unstable University Assessments:** * In response to the pandemic, universities shifted to online, open-book assessments. This trend has largely continued. * **Key Statistic:** Five years after the pandemic began, **70% of universities** still utilize some form of online assessment. * This has led to a highly variable and inconsistent system. The author notes her own exams switched from half-online in her first year to all-handwritten in her second, with confirmation of the format arriving late in the academic year. * This inconsistency creates an environment of uncertainty, making AI tools more appealing to students navigating a constantly changing system. **3. The Role of AI as a Tool:** * While acknowledging concerns about cheating, McDowell states that students often view AI as a "broadly acceptable tool in the learning process" for tasks like research assistance and structuring essays. * The release of ChatGPT in 2022 occurred in a "university system in transition," making it a convenient solution for students dealing with academic uncertainty. ### Contributing Socio-Economic Factors The author argues that the problem extends beyond the classroom and is exacerbated by significant financial pressures. * **Student Employment:** A record number of students are working to support themselves. * **Key Statistic:** **68% of students have part-time jobs**, which is the highest rate in a decade. * This leaves students with "less time than ever to actually be students," making time-saving tools like AI more attractive. * **Student Debt:** The financial burden on students is increasing. * **Key Detail:** The author's cohort is the first to face a **40-year student loan repayment period**, a significant increase from the previous 30-year term. ### Conclusion and Recommendations The author concludes that the rise in AI use is a symptom of systemic issues within higher education, not a moral failing of the student body. The combination of academic instability and financial precarity has created a "perfect storm" for AI adoption. **Recommendations:** * **Consistency:** Universities must decide on a stable and consistent examination format and adhere to it. * **Clarity on AI Use:** If universities continue with coursework or open-book exams, they must provide clear and explicit guidelines on what constitutes "proportionate" and acceptable usage of AI. ### Notable Risks and Concerns While defending students' use of AI, the author also personally acknowledges valid concerns, including: * The potential for abuse and overuse of Large Language Models (LLMs) in education. * The significant environmental cost (water and energy consumption) of powering AI data centers.

It’s true that my fellow students are embracing AI – but this is what the critics aren’t seeing | Elsie McDowell

Read original at The Guardian

Reading about the role of artificial intelligence in higher education, the landscape looks bleak. Students are cheating en masse in our assessments or open-book, online exams using AI tools, all the while making ourselves stupider. The next generation of graduates, apparently, are going to complete their degrees without ever having so much as approached a critical thought.

Given that my course is examined entirely through closed-book exams, and I worry about the vast amounts of water and energy needed to power AI datacentres, I generally avoid using ChatGPT. But in my experience, students see it as a broadly acceptable tool in the learning process. Although debates about AI tend to focus on “cheating”, it is increasingly being used to assist with research, or to help structure essays.

There are valid concerns about the abuse and overuse of large language models (LLMs) in education. But if you want to understand why so many students are turning to AI, you need to understand what brought us to this point – and the educational context against which this is playing out.In March 2020, I was about to turn 15.

When the news broke that schools would be closing as part of the Covid lockdown, I remember cheers erupting in the corridors. As I celebrated what we all thought was just two weeks off school, I could not have envisioned the disruption that would mar the next three years of my education.That year, GCSEs and A-levels were cancelled and replaced with teacher-assessed grades, which notoriously privileged those at already well-performing private schools.

After further school closures, and a prolonged period of dithering, the then-education secretary, Gavin Williamson, cancelled them again in 2021. My A-level cohort in 2023 was the first to return to “normal” examinations – in England, at least – which resulted in a punitive crackdown on grade inflation that left many with far lower grades than expected.

At the same time, universities across the country were also grappling with how to assess students who were no longer physically on campus. The solution: open-book, online assessments for papers that were not already examined by coursework. When the students of the lockdown years graduated, the university system did not immediately return to its pre-Covid arrangements.

Five years on, 70% of universities still use some form of online assessment.This is not because, as some will have you believe, university has become too easy. These changes are a response to the fact that the large majority of current home students did not have the typical experience of national exams.

Given the extensive periods of time we spent away from school during our GCSE and A-level years, there were inevitably parts of the curriculum that we were never able to cover. But beyond missed content, the government’s repeated backtracking and U-turning on the format of our exams from 2020 onwards bred uncertainty that continued to shape how we were assessed – even as we progressed on to higher education.

In my first year of university, half of my exams were online. This year, they all returned to handwritten, closed-book assessments. In both cases, I did not get confirmation about the format of my exams until well into the academic year. And, in one instance, third-year students sitting the exact same paper as me were examined online and in a longer timeframe, to recognise that they had not sat a handwritten exam at any point during their degree.

And so when ChatGPT was released in 2022, it landed in a university system in transition, characterised by yet more uncertainty. University exams had already become inconsistent and widely variable, between universities and within faculties themselves – only serving to increase the allure of AI for students who felt on the back foot, and make it harder to detect and monitor its use.

Even if it were not for our botched exams, being a student is more expensive than ever: 68% of students have part-time jobs, the highest rate in a decade. The student loan system, too, leaves those from the poorest backgrounds with the largest amounts of debt. I am already part of the first year to have to pay back our loans over 40, rather than 30, years.

And that is before tuition fees rise again.Students have less time than ever to actually be students. AI is a time-saving tool; if students don’t have the time or resources to fully engage with their studies, it is because something has gone badly wrong with the university system itself.The use of AI is mushrooming because it’s convenient and fast, yes, but also because of the uncertainty that prevails around post-Covid exams, as well as the increasing financial precarity of students.

Universities need to pick an exam format and stick to it. If this involves coursework or open-book exams, there needs to be clarity about what “proportionate” usage of AI looks like. For better or for worse, AI is here to stay. Not because students are lazy, but because what it means to be a student is changing just as rapidly as technology.

Elsie McDowell is a student. She was the 2023 winner of the Hugo Young award, 16-18 age categoryDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

Analysis

Phenomenon+
Conflict+
Background+
Impact+
Future+

Related Podcasts