AI摧毁大学写作之后,会发生什么?

AI摧毁大学写作之后,会发生什么?

2025-07-02Technology
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王小二
大家早上好,我是王小二,欢迎收听新一期的 <Goose Pod>。今天又是元气满满的星期三,Ema,准备好聊点有意思的了吗?
Ema
当然!大家好,我是Ema。今天我们要聊的话题,听起来有点科幻:“AI摧毁大学写作之后,会发生什么?” 但我觉得,这事儿可能比我们想象的更贴近现实。
王小二
没错,我们先从一个真实案例说起。《纽约客》最近报道了一个叫Alex的纽约大学学生,他坦白说,他生活中几乎“任何类型的写作”都会用AI。
Ema
任何类型?这范围也太广了吧!是写作业那种,还是……?
王小二
从研究论文到日常邮件,甚至包括给女孩子发的短信。他都毫不避讳地在使用AI。这已经成了一种习惯,或者说是一种本能了。
Ema
哇,这可真是……有点极致啊。他甚至开玩笑说,想要一个能帮他自动约会的AI。感觉技术和生活的边界在他那里已经完全模糊了。
王小二
最惊人的还不止于此。他展示了一篇完全由AI生成的艺术史论文。过程很简单:去博物馆,拍下艺术品的照片和文字说明,然后一股脑儿丢给AI。
Ema
然后呢?结果怎么样?我特别好奇教授的反应。这听起来风险也太高了!直接用AI写,被抓到不是就完蛋了吗?
王小二
结果……他拿了A-。他说,教这门课的教授“年纪很大”,可能压根就不知道还有AI检测工具这回事。而且那篇论文的风格,模仿得惟妙惟肖。
Ema
这简直就是一场“猫鼠游戏”嘛!不过,他自己也心虚吧?要是教授在课上提问一些细节,他估计就露馅了。
王小二
他自己也承认,真要提问细节,他肯定“完蛋”。有趣的是,他的朋友对这件事的看法。他的朋友试着用AI检测工具去测那篇论文。
Ema
哦?检测结果怎么说?我猜这些工具自己也挺“分裂”的。
王小二
你猜对了。一个网站说28%是AI写的,另一个说61%。你看,连机器自己都搞不清楚。这就让“作弊”的定义变得更复杂了。
Ema
这就有意思了。那当事人自己怎么看?当被问到这算不算作弊时,Alex是怎么回答的?他总得为自己辩解几句吧?
王小二
他倒是非常坦诚。提问者话还没说完,他就打断说:“当然算作弊了,你开什么玩笑?” 他清楚地知道自己在做什么,但他不在乎。
Ema
嗯……这种坦然的“作弊”背后,其实反映了一个更深的问题。学生们为什么觉得有些课不重要,以至于愿意放弃学习过程,也要追求效率?
王小二
这确实不是个例。数据显示,大约有三分之一的大学生在用AI完成学业,而且这可能还是个被低估的数字。对他们来说,AI和谷歌搜索没什么区别。
Ema
没错,就是个工具嘛。2024年皮尤研究中心的数据也显示,有四分之一的青少年用ChatGPT做作业,是去年的两倍。技术发展太快,教育规则完全没跟上。
王小二
说到这,让我想想……这一切的引爆点,应该是2022年底OpenAI发布的ChatGPT。它只用了不到一个星期,用户就破了百万,教育界瞬间拉响了警报。
Ema
我记得那段时间,大家都很震惊。以前的AI,像微软那个Tay,上线一天不到就开始胡言乱语。但ChatGPT完全不一样,它能理解问题,还能写代码、写诗。
王小二
是的,它的出现让谷歌都感到了威胁,立刻宣布进入“红色警戒”状态。而在教育领域,教授们发现学生几秒钟就能生成一篇论文,这简直是“作业杀手”。
Ema
那学校一开始的反应是什么?我猜肯定是全面禁止吧?就像我们上学时,学校禁止带手机进考场一样。但这种技术,禁得住吗?
王小二
没错,很多大学最初都尝试禁止,但基本都失败了。所以,态度就从恐慌和禁止,慢慢变成了一种……怎么说呢,“充满希望的无可奈何”。
Ema
“充满希望的无可奈何”,这个形容很到位!一方面,老师们在讨论怎么防作弊;另一方面,大学自己却开始跟OpenAI合作,推出校园版AI。太矛盾了。
王小二
是的,牛津、沃顿商学院这些顶尖学府,都开始把AI整合到教学里。这就好比学校一边说着“不许抽烟”,一边又在校园里开了个烟草专卖店。
Ema
这种矛盾,其实也把教育系统长期存在的一些问题给暴露出来了。文章提到一个观点,说这和美国早年一个叫《不让一个孩子掉队》的法案有关。
王小二
对,那个法案过度强调标准化测试,导致学生们从小就被训练成用固定的套路写作。比如那种“汉堡包结构”的五段式作文,早就过时了。
Ema
我明白了。所以,学生们之所以讨厌写作,很大程度上是因为它被教成了一种机械、枯燥的填空游戏。AI的出现,正好给了他们一个摆脱这种痛苦的工具。
王小二
完全正确。而且,我们还得考虑现在大学生的“忙碌文化”。数据显示,如今的大学生每周花在学业上的时间,比几十年前少了很多。
Ema
但他们并没有更清闲,对吧?我听说,他们把大量时间都投入到实习、社团这些课外活动上了。因为成绩已经很难拉开差距了。
王小二
是的,哈佛大学2024届将近80%的学生,GPA都高达3.7以上。分数通货膨胀了,简历上的实习经历就变得更重要。写作课,自然就成了可以用AI高效解决的“成本”。
Ema
所以说,AI的冲击,就像一个放大镜,把教育领域几十年积累下来的问题全都照了出来。从僵化的教学,到分数通胀,AI只是那个最后推倒多米诺骨牌的手指。
王小二
没错。我们不能简单地把责任都推给学生。他们成长在一个信息爆炸、凡事都追求“速成”和“最优解”的环境里。AI就是那个“最优解”。
Ema
这让我想起一个概念,叫“大众书写”时代。我们每天都在发邮件、写评论,写作能力应该空前重要才对。但讽刺的是,一个帮我们“外包”写作的工具,却大受欢迎。
王小二
这正是核心矛盾。写作塑造思维。当我们把这个过程外包给AI时,我们失去的可能不只是一次作业,而是锻炼思维、形成独立观点的机会。这才是教育者最担心的。
Ema
是的,这就引出了很多冲突。核心就是“作弊”的定义,现在已经非常模糊了。学生、教授和学校,三方完全不在一个频道上。
王小二
对,就像之前那个学生说的,他觉得用AI写一篇非专业的论文,是一个“没有受害者的罪行”。他只是想满足毕业要求,又不是要当学者。
Ema
这个观点在学生里很有代表性。他们会把课程分成“有用”和“没用”的。但教授们可不这么想,这对他们来说,是触及了教育的底线。
王小二
所以,有些教授选择了一种非常“复古”的对抗方式。布鲁克林学院的一位老教授,在发现AI能写出和他教了一学期的学生差不多的文章后,就果断放弃了所有带回家的论文作业。
Ema
哦?那他用什么来考核学生呢?总得有成绩吧?难道是回到口试的年代了?这在大班课上,操作起来可不容易。
王小二
他恢复了“蓝皮书考试”,就是在课堂上发卷子,让学生手写回答问题。他说,这能“在不扮演警察的前提下,尊重学生的自主性”。
Ema
“蓝皮书考试”,听着好有年代感!这背后其实是一种深深的无奈。不过,肯定也有不那么“复古”的教授吧?毕竟,问题不只出在AI身上。
王小二
当然。也有教授认为,如果你布置一个很笼统的题目,一个月后才收,那“几乎就是在为犯罪创造量身定做的环境”。他甚至开玩笑说“你这是在鼓励社区犯罪!”
Ema
哈哈,这个说法很犀利。所以他的方法是?
王小二
他倡导过程性写作,强调草稿、反馈、修改。在这个过程中,甚至可以把AI当作一个陪练,让学生跟AI对话、修改自己的文章。
Ema
这听起来是个更积极的办法,把AI从“敌人”变成了“工具”。但这又带来了新的冲突:学生们真的愿意投入这个“繁琐”的过程吗?写作本身就是件难事啊。
王小二
是的,这就引出了学生内心的冲突。有个叫Kevin的学生,他坚持自己写作,这让他有一种“智力上的优越感”,觉得自己学到了真东西。
Ema
但我猜,当他看到用AI的同学花更少的时间,拿差不多的分,还能出去玩,他心里肯定会觉得不平衡吧?
王小二
他自己也承认,“我生活的另一部分会觉得,这太不公平了。我到底得到了什么?我只是在自讨苦吃。” 这种矛盾心态,可能才是当下最真实的写照。
Ema
还有一种更极端的,就是完全的“心理脱钩”。有个学计算机的学生,在一门保证拿A的课上,用AI写了篇讲稿,几乎没改就交了。
王小二
结果呢?不会是被当成范文了吧?那也太讽刺了。
Ema
你又猜对了!教授还真把她的作业当成范文,让她在200人面前朗读。她一开始很紧张,但后来她意识到:“如果他们不喜欢,那也不是我写的,你懂吗?”
王小二
哇,这种心态……AI成了她的一个“虚拟替身”,替她承担了所有评价和风险。我觉得,这种心态的变化,可能比作弊本身更值得我们关注。
王小二
说到影响,最直接的就是对学生思维习惯的冲击。有个学生说了一句很经典的话,她说AI“也许没有让我成为一个更差的作者,但它让我成了一个更没有耐心的作者。”
Ema
“更没有耐心的作者”,这个描述太精准了!以前可能会花好几个小时斟酌词句,现在一键生成。这种“效率”的代价,就是失去了深入思考和打磨语言的过程。
王小二
对,文章里用了一个比喻,我觉得特别好:GPS导航。我们现在都用导航,很少有人会去记路了。但研究发现,伦敦那些经过严格训练的出租车司机,他们大脑里负责记忆和空间感的海马体,就特别发达。
Ema
我明白了。技术让我们更高效,但也可能让我们失去了某些能力。所以问题就变成了:写作,究竟是可以被“外包”的技能,还是一种必须亲力亲为的核心能力?
王小二
而且这种影响是潜移默化的。有个学生甚至开始担心,自己的写作风格会不会变得越来越像ChatGPT。她会把自己的文章放进检测器,看“AI味”重不重。
Ema
这太可怕了,就像一种“认知污染”。我们以为自己在独立思考,但实际上可能只是在模仿机器的语言模式。长此以往,会不会所有人的表达都变得千篇一律?
王小二
这并非危言耸听。有研究显示,近十年来,成年人的智力水平,包括阅读理解能力,其实是在下降的。研究人员推测,这和我们习惯阅读简短的社交媒体帖子有关。
Ema
所以,AI的普及,可能会加剧这种智力“浅薄化”的趋势。不过,我们也不能完全否定AI积极的一面,对吧?比如在帮助非母语学生方面。
王小二
没错。关键在于,我们是把它当作思考的“辅助”,还是思考的“替代品”。但这个界限,说实话,非常模糊,诱惑也很大。
Ema
是的,几乎所有受访学生都描述了同样的使用轨迹:从一开始用AI来组织思路,到最后完全外包自己的思考。它就像社交媒体一样,总是在那,随时可以求助。
王小二
那展望未来,教育界要怎么应对呢?一种可能的方向,就是我们前面提到的,回归传统。比如手写考试和口试。
Ema
嗯,手写确实有它的价值。神经科学家说,手写的体验能激活大脑的不同区域。但这也会带来新的公平问题,对那些从小就习惯打字的学生可能不公平。
王小二
这是一个两难的选择。但还有另一条路,就是彻底拥抱AI,把它变成一个革命性的教学工具。比如,用AI来做个性化的家教。
Ema
这个想法很大胆。加州大学有位教授就做了个实验,他想,既然AI这么厉害,那我就给学生出一个博士水平的难题,看AI能不能帮他们“跳级”。
王小二
我猜……结果肯定不怎么样吧?就像学木工,没学过手动锯,直接用电锯,很容易出事。学习过程中的某些基础,恐怕是跳不过去的。
Ema
你说对了。那位教授的原话是:“他们TMD考得一塌糊涂。” 这个实验说明,AI可以提供信息,但无法替代真正的理解。未来,批判性思维和原创性会变得更有价值。
王小二
所以说到底,AI并没有摧毁大学写作,它只是摧毁了我们过去对教育的旧观念。它像一面镜子,照出了我们教育体系的脆弱和学生的真实困境。
Ema
没错。AI让我们不得不去思考一个最根本的问题:教育的意义到底是什么?也许,正如文中所说,是风险、怀疑和失败让我们成为人类。在AI可以提供所有“正确”答案的时代,学会提问,并勇敢地给出自己不完美的答案,才更珍贵。
王小二
今天的讨论就到这里。感谢您的收听,我是王小二。
Ema
我是Ema。咱们下期 <Goose Pod> 再见!

### **Summary of News Report** | | | | :--- | :--- | | **News Title** | What Happens After A.I. Destroys College Writing? | | **Author** | Hua Hsu | | **Publisher** | The New Yorker | | **Publication Date** | July 7, 2025 (as per article metadata) | | **Topic** | Technology / Artificial Intelligence in Education | *** ### **Overview** This article by Hua Hsu provides a comprehensive and narrative-driven exploration of the profound impact generative artificial intelligence (AI) is having on higher education. Through candid interviews with university students and professors, the piece documents the widespread, and often unacknowledged, use of AI tools like ChatGPT and Claude for academic work. It moves beyond a simple discussion of cheating to question the very purpose of college education, the value of writing as a tool for thinking, and the future of learning in an AI-saturated world. The author concludes that students are not the sole actors to blame; rather, they are "early adopters" navigating a system that increasingly values efficiency over the difficult, formative process of learning. ### **Key Findings: Student AI Usage and Perspectives** The article reveals that student adoption of AI is far more pervasive and sophisticated than official statistics suggest. * **Widespread and Varied Use:** Students use AI for a wide spectrum of tasks, from brainstorming and organizing notes to generating entire essays and completing quizzes. * **Alex (NYU):** Openly admits, "Any type of writing in life, I use A.I." He used Claude to generate an A-minus paper for an art-history class by uploading photos of the exhibit's wall text. He estimates AI saved him 8-9 hours on two final papers, but concedes, "I didn’t retain anything." * **May (Georgetown):** Uses AI for "pretty much all" her classes to breeze through "busywork," which allows her to focus on courses she enjoys and, notably, to "sleep more now." She feels AI has made her a "less patient writer." * **Eddie (Long Beach State):** Tries to use AI "ethically" as a brainstorming tool but admits to using it for quizzes when pressed for time. * **Rationale and Justification:** Students largely view AI as a powerful productivity tool, analogous to Google or a calculator, rather than a tool for academic dishonesty. * They use it to manage heavy workloads, bypass assignments they deem pointless ("busywork"), and optimize their time for pre-professional or extracurricular activities. * The line on cheating is blurred. As Eugene (NYU) puts it, **“It’s cheating, but I don’t think it’s, like, cheating,”** viewing it as a victimless crime for non-major requirements. * Some students, like August (Columbia), feel completely dissociated from AI-generated work. After her AI-written lecture was praised, she felt no pressure: **"If they don’t like it, it wasn’t me who wrote it, you know?"** ### **Institutional and Faculty Responses** Educators and institutions are grappling with the AI revolution, leading to a variety of fragmented and evolving strategies. * **Initial Panic and Unreliable Detection:** The first reaction was to ban AI and use detection services (GPTZero, Copyleaks), but these have proven unreliable. One of Alex's AI-generated papers received conflicting scores of 28% and 61% likelihood from different detectors. * **Return to Traditional Methods:** Many professors are reverting to "un-hackable" assessment methods to ensure authenticity. * **In-Class Exams:** Professors like Corey Robin (Brooklyn College) have abandoned take-home essays for in-class, blue-book exams that test direct knowledge of texts. * **Handwritten Work:** Harry Stecopoulos (University of Iowa) uses a handwritten analysis exercise on the first day of class to set a tone and create a "paper trail" of a student's authentic writing style. * **Pedagogical Adaptation:** Some educators are redesigning assignments to make AI less useful. * Professor Dan Melzer (UC Davis) argues against the "outdated" five-paragraph essay, stating, **"If you assign a generic essay topic... it’s almost like you’re creating an environment tailored to crime."** He advocates for a process-based approach with drafting, peer feedback, and revision. * **Institutional Embrace:** Counterintuitively, many universities are now partnering with the very companies whose tools they once tried to ban. * Schools like Arizona State, Wharton, and the Cal State system have partnered with OpenAI to provide students with **ChatGPT Edu**, integrating AI as an official educational tool. ### **Critical Data and Trends** The article contextualizes the AI phenomenon with several key statistics that paint a picture of a changing educational landscape. * **AI Adoption & Cheating:** * A late 2023 survey found **59% of college leaders** reported an increase in cheating. * A 2024 Pew survey shows **25% of teens** use ChatGPT for schoolwork, double the 2023 figure. OpenAI claims **1 in 3 college students** use its products. * **Academic Engagement and Performance:** * Weekly study time for college students has fallen from **~24 hours** in the 1960s to **~15 hours** today. * Grade inflation is significant; at Harvard, nearly **80% of the class of 2024** reported a GPA of 3.7 or higher. * An experiment at Harvard showed AI could pass seven courses with a **3.57 GPA**. * **Literacy and Skill Decline:** * A 2023 study found **58% of English majors** at two universities struggled to interpret the opening of Dickens' "Bleak House" independently. * An OECD study indicates a decade-long decline in adult math and reading comprehension scores since 2012. ### **Notable Risks and Core Concerns** The central thesis of the article is that AI poses an existential threat to the traditional goals of a liberal arts education. * **Erosion of Critical Thinking:** The primary concern is that by allowing students to bypass difficult tasks, AI prevents the development of essential skills. The author emphasizes that the process of writing is inextricably linked to the process of thinking. * **The Purpose of College:** AI forces a reckoning with the fundamental question of what college is for. If students can obtain credentials without undergoing the formative struggle of learning, the ancillary benefits of education—like intellectual curiosity and resilience—are lost. * **The Degradation of Writing:** As AI floods the world with generic text, the ability to write original, interesting sentences may become a more valuable, and rarer, skill. * **The Futility of the "AI Arms Race":** Professor Barry Lam (UC Riverside) highlights the absurdity of the situation, telling his students, **"If you’re gonna just turn in a paper that’s ChatGPT-generated, then I will grade all your work by ChatGPT and we can all go to the beach."** * **Students as Products of Their Environment:** The author concludes that students are not villains but are responding logically to the pressures of modern life and an educational system that has long been shifting towards efficiency, standardization, and technology. As high school teacher Shanna Andrawis states, AI is **"a little cherry on top of an already really bad ice-cream sundae"** of challenges facing young people.

What Happens After A.I. Destroys College Writing?

Read original at The New Yorker

On a blustery spring Thursday, just after midterms, I went out for noodles with Alex and Eugene, two undergraduates at New York University, to talk about how they use artificial intelligence in their schoolwork. When I first met Alex, last year, he was interested in a career in the arts, and he devoted a lot of his free time to photo shoots with his friends.

But he had recently decided on a more practical path: he wanted to become a C.P.A. His Thursdays were busy, and he had forty-five minutes until a study session for an accounting class. He stowed his skateboard under a bench in the restaurant and shook his laptop out of his bag, connecting to the internet before we sat down.

Alex has wavy hair and speaks with the chill, singsong cadence of someone who has spent a lot of time in the Bay Area. He and Eugene scanned the menu, and Alex said that they should get clear broth, rather than spicy, “so we can both lock in our skin care.” Weeks earlier, when I’d messaged Alex, he had said that everyone he knew used ChatGPT in some fashion, but that he used it only for organizing his notes.

In person, he admitted that this wasn’t remotely accurate. “Any type of writing in life, I use A.I.,” he said. He relied on Claude for research, DeepSeek for reasoning and explanation, and Gemini for image generation. ChatGPT served more general needs. “I need A.I. to text girls,” he joked, imagining an A.

I.-enhanced version of Hinge. I asked if he had used A.I. when setting up our meeting. He laughed, and then replied, “Honestly, yeah. I’m not tryin’ to type all that. Could you tell?”OpenAI released ChatGPT on November 30, 2022. Six days later, Sam Altman, the C.E.O., announced that it had reached a million users.

Large language models like ChatGPT don’t “think” in the human sense—when you ask ChatGPT a question, it draws from the data sets it has been trained on and builds an answer based on predictable word patterns. Companies had experimented with A.I.-driven chatbots for years, but most sputtered upon release; Microsoft’s 2016 experiment with a bot named Tay was shut down after sixteen hours because it began spouting racist rhetoric and denying the Holocaust.

But ChatGPT seemed different. It could hold a conversation and break complex ideas down into easy-to-follow steps. Within a month, Google’s management, fearful that A.I. would have an impact on its search-engine business, declared a “code red.”Among educators, an even greater panic arose. It was too deep into the school term to implement a coherent policy for what seemed like a homework killer: in seconds, ChatGPT could collect and summarize research and draft a full essay.

Many large campuses tried to regulate ChatGPT and its eventual competitors, mostly in vain. I asked Alex to show me an example of an A.I.-produced paper. Eugene wanted to see it, too. He used a different A.I. app to help with computations for his business classes, but he had never gotten the hang of using it for writing.

“I got you,” Alex told him. (All the students I spoke with are identified by pseudonyms.)He opened Claude on his laptop. I noticed a chat that mentioned abolition. “We had to read Robert Wedderburn for a class,” he explained, referring to the nineteenth-century Jamaican abolitionist. “But, obviously, I wasn’t tryin’ to read that.

” He had prompted Claude for a summary, but it was too long for him to read in the ten minutes he had before class started. He told me, “I said, ‘Turn it into concise bullet points.’ ” He then transcribed Claude’s points in his notebook, since his professor ran a screen-free classroom.Alex searched until he found a paper for an art-history class, about a museum exhibition.

He had gone to the show, taken photographs of the images and the accompanying wall text, and then uploaded them to Claude, asking it to generate a paper according to the professor’s instructions. “I’m trying to do the least work possible, because this is a class I’m not hella fucking with,” he said.

After skimming the essay, he felt that the A.I. hadn’t sufficiently addressed the professor’s questions, so he refined the prompt and told it to try again. In the end, Alex’s submission received the equivalent of an A-minus. He said that he had a basic grasp of the paper’s argument, but that if the professor had asked him for specifics he’d have been “so fucked.

” I read the paper over Alex’s shoulder; it was a solid imitation of how an undergraduate might describe a set of images. If this had been 2007, I wouldn’t have made much of its generic tone, or of the precise, box-ticking quality of its critical observations.Eugene, serious and somewhat solemn, had been listening with bemusement.

“I would not cut and paste like he did, because I’m a lot more paranoid,” he said. He’s a couple of years younger than Alex and was in high school when ChatGPT was released. At the time, he experimented with A.I. for essays but noticed that it made easily noticed errors. “This passed the A.I. detector?

” he asked Alex.When ChatGPT launched, instructors adopted various measures to insure that students’ work was their own. These included requiring them to share time-stamped version histories of their Google documents, and designing written assignments that had to be completed in person, over multiple sessions.

But most detective work occurs after submission. Services like GPTZero, Copyleaks, and Originality.ai analyze the structure and syntax of a piece of writing and assess the likelihood that it was produced by a machine. Alex said that his art-history professor was “hella old,” and therefore probably didn’t know about such programs.

We fed the paper into a few different A.I.-detection websites. One said there was a twenty-eight-per-cent chance that the paper was A.I.-generated; another put the odds at sixty-one per cent. “That’s better than I expected,” Eugene said.I asked if he thought what his friend had done was cheating, and Alex interrupted: “Of course.

Are you fucking kidding me?”“There’s still one juror who hasn’t been properly intimidated.”Cartoon by Frank CothamAs we looked at Alex’s laptop, I noticed that he had recently asked ChatGPT whether it was O.K. to go running in Nike Dunks. He had concluded that ChatGPT made for the best confidant. He consulted it as one might a therapist, asking for tips on dating and on how to stay motivated during dark times.

His ChatGPT sidebar was an index of the highs and lows of being a young person. He admitted to me and Eugene that he’d used ChatGPT to draft his application to N.Y.U.—our lunch might never have happened had it not been for A.I. “I guess it’s really dishonest, but, fuck it, I’m here,” he said.“It’s cheating, but I don’t think it’s, like, cheating,” Eugene said.

He saw Alex’s art-history essay as a victimless crime. He was just fulfilling requirements, not training to become a literary scholar.Alex had to rush off to his study session. I told Eugene that our conversation had made me wonder about my function as a professor. He asked if I taught English, and I nodded.

“Mm, O.K.,” he said, and laughed. “So you’re, like, majorly affected.”I teach at a small liberal-arts college, and I often joke that a student is more likely to hand in a big paper a year late (as recently happened) than to take a dishonorable shortcut. My classes are small and intimate, driven by processes and pedagogical modes, like letting awkward silences linger, that are difficult to scale.

As a result, I have always had a vague sense that my students are learning something, even when it is hard to quantify. In the past, if I was worried that a paper had been plagiarized, I would enter a few phrases from it into a search engine and call it due diligence. But I recently began noticing that some students’ writing seemed out of synch with how they expressed themselves in the classroom.

One essay felt stitched together from two minds—half of it was polished and rote, the other intimate and unfiltered. Having never articulated a policy for A.I., I took the easy way out. The student had had enough shame to write half of the essay, and I focussed my feedback on improving that part.It’s easy to get hung up on stories of academic dishonesty.

Late last year, in a survey of college and university leaders, fifty-nine per cent reported an increase in cheating, a figure that feels conservative when you talk to students. A.I. has returned us to the question of what the point of higher education is. Until we’re eighteen, we go to school because we have to, studying the Second World War and reducing fractions while undergoing a process of socialization.

We’re essentially learning how to follow rules. College, however, is a choice, and it has always involved the tacit agreement that students will fulfill a set of tasks, sometimes pertaining to subjects they find pointless or impractical, and then receive some kind of credential. But even for the most mercenary of students, the pursuit of a grade or a diploma has come with an ancillary benefit.

You’re being taught how to do something difficult, and maybe, along the way, you come to appreciate the process of learning. But the arrival of A.I. means that you can now bypass the process, and the difficulty, altogether.There are no reliable figures for how many American students use A.I., just stories about how everyone is doing it.

A 2024 Pew Research Center survey of students between the ages of thirteen and seventeen suggests that a quarter of teens currently use ChatGPT for schoolwork, double the figure from 2023. OpenAI recently released a report claiming that one in three college students uses its products. There’s good reason to believe that these are low estimates.

If you grew up Googling everything or using Grammarly to give your prose a professional gloss, it isn’t far-fetched to regard A.I. as just another productivity tool. “I see it as no different from Google,” Eugene said. “I use it for the same kind of purpose.”Being a student is about testing boundaries and staying one step ahead of the rules.

While administrators and educators have been debating new definitions for cheating and discussing the mechanics of surveillance, students have been embracing the possibilities of A.I. A few months after the release of ChatGPT, a Harvard undergraduate got approval to conduct an experiment in which it wrote papers that had been assigned in seven courses.

The A.I. skated by with a 3.57 G.P.A., a little below the school’s average. Upstart companies introduced products that specialized in “humanizing” A.I.-generated writing, and TikTok influencers began coaching their audiences on how to avoid detection.Unable to keep pace, academic administrations largely stopped trying to control students’ use of artificial intelligence and adopted an attitude of hopeful resignation, encouraging teachers to explore the practical, pedagogical applications of A.

I. In certain fields, this wasn’t a huge stretch. Studies show that A.I. is particularly effective in helping non-native speakers acclimate to college-level writing in English. In some STEM classes, using generative A.I. as a tool is acceptable. Alex and Eugene told me that their accounting professor encouraged them to take advantage of free offers on new A.

I. products available only to undergraduates, as companies competed for student loyalty throughout the spring. In May, OpenAI announced ChatGPT Edu, a product specifically marketed for educational use, after schools including Oxford University, Arizona State University, and the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business experimented with incorporating A.

I. into their curricula. This month, the company detailed plans to integrate ChatGPT into every dimension of campus life, with students receiving “personalized” A.I. accounts to accompany them throughout their years in college.But for English departments, and for college writing in general, the arrival of A.

I. has been more vexed. Why bother teaching writing now? The future of the midterm essay may be a quaint worry compared with larger questions about the ramifications of artificial intelligence, such as its effect on the environment, or the automation of jobs. And yet has there ever been a time in human history when writing was so important to the average person?

E-mails, texts, social-media posts, angry missives in comments sections, customer-service chats—let alone one’s actual work. The way we write shapes our thinking. We process the world through the composition of text dozens of times a day, in what the literary scholar Deborah Brandt calls our era of “mass writing.

” It’s possible that the ability to write original and interesting sentences will become only more important in a future where everyone has access to the same A.I. assistants.Corey Robin, a writer and a professor of political science at Brooklyn College, read the early stories about ChatGPT with skepticism.

Then his daughter, a sophomore in high school at the time, used it to produce an essay that was about as good as those his undergraduates wrote after a semester of work. He decided to stop assigning take-home essays. For the first time in his thirty years of teaching, he administered in-class exams.

Robin told me he finds many of the steps that universities have taken to combat A.I. essays to be “hand-holding that’s not leading people anywhere.” He has become a believer in the passage-identification blue-book exam, in which students name and contextualize excerpts of what they’ve read for class.

“Know the text and write about it intelligently,” he said. “That was a way of honoring their autonomy without being a cop.”His daughter, who is now a senior, complains that her teachers rarely assign full books. And Robin has noticed that college students are more comfortable with excerpts than with entire articles, and prefer short stories to novels.

“I don’t get the sense they have the kind of literary or cultural mastery that used to be the assumption upon which we assigned papers,” he said. One study, published last year, found that fifty-eight per cent of students at two Midwestern universities had so much trouble interpreting the opening paragraphs of “Bleak House,” by Charles Dickens, that “they would not be able to read the novel on their own.

” And these were English majors.The return to pen and paper has been a common response to A.I. among professors, with sales of blue books rising significantly at certain universities in the past two years. Siva Vaidhyanathan, a professor of media studies at the University of Virginia, grew dispirited after some students submitted what he suspected was A.

I.-generated work for an assignment on how the school’s honor code should view A.I.-generated work. He, too, has decided to return to blue books, and is pondering the logistics of oral exams. “Maybe we go all the way back to 450 B.C.,” he told me.But other professors have renewed their emphasis on getting students to see the value of process.

Dan Melzer, the director of the first-year composition program at the University of California, Davis, recalled that “everyone was in a panic” when ChatGPT first hit. Melzer’s job is to think about how writing functions across the curriculum so that all students, from prospective scientists to future lawyers, get a chance to hone their prose.

Consequently, he has an accommodating view of how norms around communication have changed, especially in the internet age. He was sympathetic to kids who viewed some of their assignments as dull and mechanical and turned to ChatGPT to expedite the process. He called the five-paragraph essay—the classic “hamburger” structure, consisting of an introduction, three supporting body paragraphs, and a conclusion—“outdated,” having descended from élitist traditions.

Melzer believes that some students loathe writing because of how it’s been taught, particularly in the past twenty-five years. The No Child Left Behind Act, from 2002, instituted standards-based reforms across all public schools, resulting in generations of students being taught to write according to rigid testing rubrics.

As one teacher wrote in the Washington Post in 2013, students excelled when they mastered a form of “bad writing.” Melzer has designed workshops that treat writing as a deliberative, iterative process involving drafting, feedback (from peers and also from ChatGPT), and revision.“Yes, of course we’ll chase the gazelle, just as soon as I hear a status update from everyone.

”Cartoon by Kendra Allenby“If you assign a generic essay topic and don’t engage in any process, and you just collect it a month later, it’s almost like you’re creating an environment tailored to crime,” he said. “You’re encouraging crime in your community!”I found Melzer’s pedagogical approach inspiring; I instantly felt bad for routinely breaking my class into small groups so that they could “workshop” their essays, as though the meaning of this verb were intuitively clear.

But, as a student, I’d have found Melzer’s focus on process tedious—it requires a measure of faith that all the work will pay off in the end. Writing is hard, regardless of whether it’s a five-paragraph essay or a haiku, and it’s natural, especially when you’re a college student, to want to avoid hard work—this is why classes like Melzer’s are compulsory.

“You can imagine that students really want to be there,” he joked.College is all about opportunity costs. One way of viewing A.I. is as an intervention in how people choose to spend their time. In the early nineteen-sixties, college students spent an estimated twenty-four hours a week on schoolwork.

Today, that figure is about fifteen, a sign, to critics of contemporary higher education, that young people are beneficiaries of grade inflation—in a survey conducted by the Harvard Crimson, nearly eighty per cent of the class of 2024 reported a G.P.A. of 3.7 or higher—and lack the diligence of their forebears.

I don’t know how many hours I spent on schoolwork in the late nineties, when I was in college, but I recall feeling that there was never enough time. I suspect that, even if today’s students spend less time studying, they don’t feel significantly less stressed. It’s the nature of campus life that everyone assimilates into a culture of busyness, and a lot of that anxiety has been shifted to extracurricular or pre-professional pursuits.

A dean at Harvard remarked that students feel compelled to find distinction outside the classroom because they are largely indistinguishable within it.Eddie, a sociology major at Long Beach State, is older than most of his classmates. He graduated high school in 2010, and worked full time while attending a community college.

“I’ve gone through a lot to be at school,” he told me. “I want to learn as much as I can.” ChatGPT, which his therapist recommended to him, was ubiquitous at Long Beach even before the California State University system, which Long Beach is a part of, announced a partnership with OpenAI, giving its four hundred and sixty thousand students access to ChatGPT Edu.

“I was a little suspicious of how convenient it was,” Eddie said. “It seemed to know a lot, in a way that seemed so human.”He told me that he used A.I. “as a brainstorm” but never for writing itself. “I limit myself, for sure.” Eddie works for Los Angeles County, and he was talking to me during a break.

He admitted that, when he was pressed for time, he would sometimes use ChatGPT for quizzes. “I don’t know if I’m telling myself a lie,” he said. “I’ve given myself opportunities to do things ethically, but if I’m rushing to work I don’t feel bad about that,” particularly for courses outside his major.

I recognized Eddie’s conflict. I’ve used ChatGPT a handful of times, and on one occasion it accomplished a scheduling task so quickly that I began to understand the intoxication of hyper-efficiency. I’ve felt the need to stop myself from indulging in idle queries. Almost all the students I interviewed in the past few months described the same trajectory: from using A.

I. to assist with organizing their thoughts to off-loading their thinking altogether. For some, it became something akin to social media, constantly open in the corner of the screen, a portal for distraction. This wasn’t like paying someone to write a paper for you—there was no social friction, no aura of illicit activity.

Nor did it feel like sharing notes, or like passing off what you’d read in CliffsNotes or SparkNotes as your own analysis. There was no real time to reflect on questions of originality or honesty—the student basically became a project manager. And for students who use it the way Eddie did, as a kind of sounding board, there’s no clear threshold where the work ceases to be an original piece of thinking.

In April, Anthropic, the company behind Claude, released a report drawn from a million anonymized student conversations with its chatbots. It suggested that more than half of user interactions could be classified as “collaborative,” involving a dialogue between student and A.I. (Presumably, the rest of the interactions were more extractive.

)May, a sophomore at Georgetown, was initially resistant to using ChatGPT. “I don’t know if it was an ethics thing,” she said. “I just thought I could do the assignment better, and it wasn’t worth the time being saved.” But she began using it to proofread her essays, and then to generate cover letters, and now she uses it for “pretty much all” her classes.

“I don’t think it’s made me a worse writer,” she said. “It’s perhaps made me a less patient writer. I used to spend hours writing essays, nitpicking over my wording, really thinking about how to phrase things.” College had made her reflect on her experience at an extremely competitive high school, where she had received top grades but retained very little knowledge.

As a result, she was the rare student who found college somewhat relaxed. ChatGPT helped her breeze through busywork and deepen her engagement with the courses she felt passionate about. “I was trying to think, Where’s all this time going?” she said. I had never envied a college student until she told me the answer: “I sleep more now.

”Harry Stecopoulos oversees the University of Iowa’s English department, which has more than eight hundred majors. On the first day of his introductory course, he asks students to write by hand a two-hundred-word analysis of the opening paragraph of Ralph Ellison’s “Invisible Man.” There are always a few grumbles, and students have occasionally walked out.

“I like the exercise as a tone-setter, because it stresses their writing,” he told me.The return of blue-book exams might disadvantage students who were encouraged to master typing at a young age. Once you’ve grown accustomed to the smooth rhythms of typing, reverting to a pen and paper can feel stifling.

But neuroscientists have found that the “embodied experience” of writing by hand taps into parts of the brain that typing does not. Being able to write one way—even if it’s more efficient—doesn’t make the other way obsolete. There’s something lofty about Stecopoulos’s opening-day exercise. But there’s another reason for it: the handwritten paragraph also begins a paper trail, attesting to voice and style, that a teaching assistant can consult if a suspicious paper is submitted.

Kevin, a third-year student at Syracuse University, recalled that, on the first day of a class, the professor had asked everyone to compose some thoughts by hand. “That brought a smile to my face,” Kevin said. “The other kids are scratching their necks and sweating, and I’m, like, This is kind of nice.

”Kevin had worked as a teaching assistant for a mandatory course that first-year students take to acclimate to campus life. Writing assignments involved basic questions about students’ backgrounds, he told me, but they often used A.I. anyway. “I was very disturbed,” he said. He occasionally uses A.I.

to help with translations for his advanced Arabic course, but he’s come to look down on those who rely heavily on it. “They almost forget that they have the ability to think,” he said. Like many former holdouts, Kevin felt that his judicious use of A.I. was more defensible than his peers’ use of it.

As ChatGPT begins to sound more human, will we reconsider what it means to sound like ourselves? Kevin and some of his friends pride themselves on having an ear attuned to A.I.-generated text. The hallmarks, he said, include a preponderance of em dashes and a voice that feels blandly objective. An acquaintance had run an essay that she had written herself through a detector, because she worried that she was starting to phrase things like ChatGPT did.

He read her essay: “I realized, like, It does kind of sound like ChatGPT. It was freaking me out a little bit.”A particularly disarming aspect of ChatGPT is that, if you point out a mistake, it communicates in the backpedalling tone of a contrite student. (“Apologies for the earlier confusion. . . .

”) Its mistakes are often referred to as hallucinations, a description that seems to anthropomorphize A.I., conjuring a vision of a sleep-deprived assistant. Some professors told me that they had students fact-check ChatGPT’s work, as a way of discussing the importance of original research and of showing the machine’s fallibility.

Hallucination rates have grown worse for most A.I.s, with no single reason for the increase. As a researcher told the Times, “We still don’t know how these models work exactly.”But many students claim to be unbothered by A.I.’s mistakes. They appear nonchalant about the question of achievement, and even dissociated from their work, since it is only notionally theirs.

Joseph, a Division I athlete at a Big Ten school, told me that he saw no issue with using ChatGPT for his classes, but he did make one exception: he wanted to experience his African-literature course “authentically,” because it involved his heritage. Alex, the N.Y.U. student, said that if one of his A.

I. papers received a subpar grade his disappointment would be focussed on the fact that he’d spent twenty dollars on his subscription. August, a sophomore at Columbia studying computer science, told me about a class where she was required to compose a short lecture on a topic of her choosing. “It was a class where everyone was guaranteed an A, so I just put it in and I maybe edited like two words and submitted it,” she said.

Her professor identified her essay as exemplary work, and she was asked to read from it to a class of two hundred students. “I was a little nervous,” she said. But then she realized, “If they don’t like it, it wasn’t me who wrote it, you know?”Kevin, by contrast, desired a more general kind of moral distinction.

I asked if he would be bothered to receive a lower grade on an essay than a classmate who’d used ChatGPT. “Part of me is able to compartmentalize and not be pissed about it,” he said. “I developed myself as a human. I can have a superiority complex about it. I learned more.” He smiled. But then he continued, “Part of me can also be, like, This is so unfair.

I would have loved to hang out with my friends more. What did I gain? I made my life harder for all that time.”In my conversations, just as college students invariably thought of ChatGPT as merely another tool, people older than forty focussed on its effects, drawing a comparison to G.P.S. and the erosion of our relationship to space.

The London cabdrivers rigorously trained in “the knowledge” famously developed abnormally large posterior hippocampi, the part of the brain crucial for long-term memory and spatial awareness. And yet, in the end, most people would probably rather have swifter travel than sharper memories. What is worth preserving, and what do we feel comfortable off-loading in the name of efficiency?

What if we take seriously the idea that A.I. assistance can accelerate learning—that students today are arriving at their destinations faster? In 2023, researchers at Harvard introduced a self-paced A.I. tutor in a popular physics course. Students who used the A.I. tutor reported higher levels of engagement and motivation and did better on a test than those who were learning from a professor.

May, the Georgetown student, told me that she often has ChatGPT produce extra practice questions when she’s studying for a test. Could A.I. be here not to destroy education but to revolutionize it? Barry Lam teaches in the philosophy department at the University of California, Riverside, and hosts a popular podcast, Hi-Phi Nation, which applies philosophical modes of inquiry to everyday topics.

He began wondering what it would mean for A.I. to actually be a productivity tool. He spoke to me from the podcast studio he built in his shed. “Now students are able to generate in thirty seconds what used to take me a week,” he said. He compared education to carpentry, one of his many hobbies. Could you skip to using power tools without learning how to saw by hand?

If students were learning things faster, then it stood to reason that Lam could assign them “something very hard.” He wanted to test this theory, so for final exams he gave his undergraduates a Ph.D.-level question involving denotative language and the German logician Gottlob Frege which was, frankly, beyond me.

“They fucking failed it miserably,” he said. He adjusted his grading curve accordingly.Cartoon by Liana FinckLam doesn’t find the use of A.I. morally indefensible. “It’s not plagiarism in the cut-and-paste sense,” he argued, because there’s technically no original version. Rather, he finds it a potential waste of everyone’s time.

At the start of the semester, he has told students, “If you’re gonna just turn in a paper that’s ChatGPT-generated, then I will grade all your work by ChatGPT and we can all go to the beach.”Nobody gets into teaching because he loves grading papers. I talked to one professor who rhapsodized about how much more his students were learning now that he’d replaced essays with short exams.

I asked if he missed marking up essays. He laughed and said, “No comment.” An undergraduate at Northeastern University recently accused a professor of using A.I. to create course materials; she filed a formal complaint with the school, requesting a refund for some of her tuition. The dustup laid bare the tension between why many people go to college and why professors teach.

Students are raised to understand achievement as something discrete and measurable, but when they arrive at college there are people like me, imploring them to wrestle with difficulty and abstraction. Worse yet, they are told that grades don’t matter as much as they did when they were trying to get into college—only, by this point, students are wired to find the most efficient path possible to good marks.

As the craft of writing is degraded by A.I., original writing has become a valuable resource for training language models. Earlier this year, a company called Catalyst Research Alliance advertised “academic speech data and student papers” from two research studies run in the late nineties and mid-two-thousands at the University of Michigan.

The school asked the company to halt its work—the data was available for free to academics anyway—and a university spokesperson said that student data “was not and has never been for sale.” But the situation did lead many people to wonder whether institutions would begin viewing original student work as a potential revenue stream.

According to a recent study from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, human intellect has declined since 2012. An assessment of tens of thousands of adults in nearly thirty countries showed an over-all decade-long drop in test scores for math and for reading comprehension. Andreas Schleicher, the director for education and skills at the O.

E.C.D., hypothesized that the way we consume information today—often through short social-media posts—has something to do with the decline in literacy. (One of Europe’s top performers in the assessment was Estonia, which recently announced that it will bring A.I. to some high-school students in the next few years, sidelining written essays and rote homework exercises in favor of self-directed learning and oral exams.

)Lam, the philosophy professor, used to be a colleague of mine, and for a brief time we were also neighbors. I’d occasionally look out the window and see him building a fence, or gardening. He’s an avid amateur cook, guitarist, and carpenter, and he remains convinced that there is value to learning how to do things the annoying, old-fashioned, and—as he puts it—“artisanal” way.

He told me that his wife, Shanna Andrawis, who has been a high-school teacher since 2008, frequently disagreed with his cavalier methods for dealing with large learning models. Andrawis argues that dishonesty has always been an issue. “We are trying to mass educate,” she said, meaning there’s less room to be precious about the pedagogical process.

“I don’t have conversations with students about ‘artisanal’ writing. But I have conversations with them about our relationship. Respect me enough to give me your authentic voice, even if you don’t think it’s that great. It’s O.K. I want to meet you where you’re at.”Ultimately, Andrawis was less fearful of ChatGPT than of the broader conditions of being young these days.

Her students have grown increasingly introverted, staring at their phones with little desire to “practice getting over that awkwardness” that defines teen life, as she put it. A.I. might contribute to this deterioration, but it isn’t solely to blame. It’s “a little cherry on top of an already really bad ice-cream sundae,” she said.

When the school year began, my feelings about ChatGPT were somewhere between disappointment and disdain, focussed mainly on students. But, as the weeks went by, my sense of what should be done and who was at fault grew hazier. Eliminating core requirements, rethinking G.P.A., teaching A.I. skepticism—none of the potential fixes could turn back the preconditions of American youth.

Professors can reconceive of the classroom, but there is only so much we control. I lacked faith that educational institutions would ever regard new technologies as anything but inevitable. Colleges and universities, many of which had tried to curb A.I. use just a few semesters ago, rushed to partner with companies like OpenAI and Anthropic, deeming a product that didn’t exist four years ago essential to the future of school.

Except for a year spent bumming around my home town, I’ve basically been on a campus for the past thirty years. Students these days view college as consumers, in ways that never would have occurred to me when I was their age. They’ve grown up at a time when society values high-speed takes, not the slow deliberation of critical thinking.

Although I’ve empathized with my students’ various mini-dramas, I rarely project myself into their lives. I notice them noticing one another, and I let the mysteries of their lives go. Their pressures are so different from the ones I felt as a student. Although I envy their metabolisms, I would not wish for their sense of horizons.

Education, particularly in the humanities, rests on a belief that, alongside the practical things students might retain, some arcane idea mentioned in passing might take root in their mind, blossoming years in the future. A.I. allows any of us to feel like an expert, but it is risk, doubt, and failure that make us human.

I often tell my students that this is the last time in their lives that someone will have to read something they write, so they might as well tell me what they actually think.Despite all the current hysteria around students cheating, they aren’t the ones to blame. They did not lobby for the introduction of laptops when they were in elementary school, and it’s not their fault that they had to go to school on Zoom during the pandemic.

They didn’t create the A.I. tools, nor were they at the forefront of hyping technological innovation. They were just early adopters, trying to outwit the system at a time when doing so has never been so easy. And they have no more control than the rest of us. Perhaps they sense this powerlessness even more acutely than I do.

One moment, they are being told to learn to code; the next, it turns out employers are looking for the kind of “soft skills” one might learn as an English or a philosophy major. In February, a labor report from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York reported that computer-science majors had a higher unemployment rate than ethnic-studies majors did—the result, some believed, of A.

I. automating entry-level coding jobs.None of the students I spoke with seemed lazy or passive. Alex and Eugene, the N.Y.U. students, worked hard—but part of their effort went to editing out anything in their college experiences that felt extraneous. They were radically resourceful.When classes were over and students were moving into their summer housing, I e-mailed with Alex, who was settling in in the East Village.

He’d just finished his finals, and estimated that he’d spent between thirty minutes and an hour composing two papers for his humanities classes. Without the assistance of Claude, it might have taken him around eight or nine hours. “I didn’t retain anything,” he wrote. “I couldn’t tell you the thesis for either paper hahhahaha.

” He received an A-minus and a B-plus. ♦

Analysis

Phenomenon+
Conflict+
Background+
Impact+
Future+

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