诚然,我的同学都在拥抱AI——但批评者们没看到这背后的困境 | Elsie McDowell

诚然,我的同学都在拥抱AI——但批评者们没看到这背后的困境 | Elsie McDowell

2025-07-02Technology
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王小二
早上好,我是王小二。欢迎收听 <Goose Pod>,一个专为你打造的播客。今天,我们要聊一个和所有学生都息息相关的话题。
Ema
大家好,我是Ema!没错,今天的话题来自《卫报》的一篇文章,作者是位学生。她认为,大家都在用AI,但批评者们似乎没看到学生们背后的难处。
王小二
是的,这个视角很有意思。它告诉我们,学生用AI,不只是图省事或者作弊那么简单,背后有一些更深层次的,甚至是系统性的原因。
王小二
我们先来看看这个现象本身。现在像ChatGPT这样的AI工具,在学生里普及得非常快。这已经不是秘密,而是一个大家都心知肚明的普遍现象了。
Ema
对!感觉校园里大家已经不讨论“该不该用”,而是“怎么用好”。AI好像已经从一个有争议的东西,变成了一个学习上的“好帮手”。
王小二
嗯,有数据支持。皮尤研究中心的调查说,美国13到17岁的青少年里,有26%承认用ChatGPT做作业。这个数字,短短两年就翻了一倍。
Ema
哇,两年翻一番,这速度也太惊人了!而且我猜,真实数字肯定更高。这说明AI已经成了Z世代学习的一部分,就像我们当年用计算器一样平常。
王小二
这个比喻很恰当。文章作者也说,虽然大家总把AI和“作弊”联系起来,但在她看来,学生更多是把AI当成一个研究和构思论文的辅助工具。
Ema
完全正确!比如写历史论文没头绪,可以让AI帮忙列个大纲,或者解释下复杂的背景。这不是让它代写,而是让它帮你理清思路,就像个24小时在线的助教。
王小二
对,它是个辅助角色。但问题是,很多批评者只盯着“AI代写”这种极端情况,然后就给所有用AI的学生贴上“懒惰”的标签。
Ema
是啊,这太片面了。这就好比看见人用计算器,就说他数学肯定不行。他们没看到,学生可能只是想把精力用在更高层次的思考上。
王小二
而且,这不是个别现象。很多大学的调查也显示,超过三分之一的学生在用AI做作业。这说明它是一个系统性的趋势,我们必须思考背后的原因。
Ema
没错,当一个现象这么普遍时,简单归结为个人道德问题就太草率了。肯定有更大的环境因素在推动。作者的文章就是要揭示这些被忽视的“困境”。
王小二
是的。文章认为,想理解学生为什么涌向AI,就得先理解他们所处的教育大环境,特别是疫情带来的影响。这可能是理解一切的关键。
王小二
这个背景里,最关键的就是被新冠疫情深刻改变的教育体系。作者Elsie正好是疫情期间读高中的那一代,她的经历非常有代表性。
Ema
哦,那代学生确实是“历经坎坷”。2020年,她快15岁,学校突然关闭,一关就是很久。这对学习的冲击是颠覆性的。
王小二
是的。那两年,英国的中考和高考都取消了,取而代之的是“教师评估成绩”,结果被证明对那些资源好的私立学校学生更有利。
Ema
这听起来太不公平了!学生失去了证明自己的机会,未来很大程度要看学校和老师的判断。这对普通公立学校的学生打击太大了。
王小二
确实。然后到了2023年,轮到他们考试时,又成了第一批恢复“正常”考试的学生。但为了纠正所谓的“成绩膨胀”,评分标准又变得特别严苛。
Ema
天啊,这简直就是坐过山车。政策变来变去,学生就像是教育改革的“小白鼠”,完全没有一个稳定、可预测的环境。太折腾人了。
王小二
你说得很对。这种混乱还延续到了大学。疫情时,大学普遍采用在线开卷考试。而一个关键数据显示,疫情五年后,仍有70%的英国大学在使用在线评估。
Ema
我明白了。所以,当这些没怎么经历过传统大考的学生进入大学时,大学的考试系统本身也处在一个混乱的过渡期。什么都是不确定的。
王小二
是的,最大的问题就是不确定性。作者说,她大一时一半考试在线,大二又全变回手写。而每次考试形式,都要等到学年过半才通知。
Ema
这太让人崩溃了!备考就像开盲盒,完全不知道最后要怎么考。这让学生怎么规划复习?感觉完全无法掌控自己的学业。
王小二
更夸张的是,和她考同一门课的大三学生,因为之前没参加过手写考试,就被允许在线考,时间还更长。这种不一致性太打击人了。
Ema
这就是典型的“一校两制”啊。可以想象,在这样一个充满不确定和不公的系统里,学生们会感到多么无助和焦虑。
王小二
就在这个节骨眼上,ChatGPT在2022年出现了。它就像是为这个混乱的系统量身定做的。它为那些感觉无助的学生提供了一种难得的确定性。
Ema
啊,我完全理解了!当你不知道怎么考、评分标准是否公平时,AI至少是一个你能控制、能给你即时反馈的工具。它的吸引力当然爆棚了。
王小二
除了学业,经济压力也是一个巨大的推手。现在做学生比以前贵多了。一个惊人的数据是,68%的学生要打工,这是十年来的最高比例。
Ema
哇,超过三分之二!这意味着学生真正用来学习的时间被大大压缩了。他们更像是半工半读的社会人,时间根本不够用。
王小二
是的,文章说“学生们作为学生的时间前所未有地少”。在这种情况下,AI作为一个能“省时间”的工具,价值就凸显了。这不是投机取巧,而是生存策略。
Ema
没错,如果我每周要打工20小时,还要应付几门课的作业,我可能也会求助AI。比如让它帮我总结论文要点,提高效率。这是一种理性的选择。
王小二
最后,还有学生贷款。作者这一届学生,要用40年而不是30年来还贷款。这意味着他们一入学,就背上了更沉重的债务,压力巨大。
Ema
40年!几乎是整个职业生涯了。这种压力会迫使学生更关注如何高效毕业、找到工作。任何能帮他们加速的工具,都会变得很有吸引力。
王小二
所以你看,教育中断、评估混乱、经济压力、时间紧张。这几个因素叠加,共同构成了一个“完美风暴”,把学生们推向了AI。
Ema
是的,这根本不是学生懒不懒的问题,而是整个大学系统出了问题。AI的崛起,只是这个系统性问题的一个症状,一个合乎逻辑的应对策略。
王小二
这就自然引出了一个核心冲突:一边是认为学生用AI是学术不端的批评者,另一边是把它当成求生工具的学生。这两种观点的对立非常激烈。
Ema
没错。一边是校方,担心AI破坏学术诚信,想用各种检测工具围堵。另一边是学生,觉得“你们没看到我们为什么不得不用”。AI对他们来说,更像是“扳平比分”的工具。
王小二
是的,这种视角冲突导致了互不理解。校方觉得学生在挑战规则,学生觉得规则本身就有问题。比如考试形式年年变,学生很难对这个系统建立信任。
Ema
对,这就产生了信任危机。学生会觉得,既然系统都不公平,我为什么还要严格遵守旧规则?这就像一场游戏,规则总在变,玩家当然会寻找“非常规”策略。
王小二
同时,技术也让冲突更复杂。AI检测工具的准确性一直备受争议。被机器错判为“AI生成”,对一个学生的打击可能是毁灭性的。
Ema
哦,这点太重要了!你辛辛苦苦写的论文,被机器一口咬定是抄袭,这会极大地打击自信心,甚至让你怀疑自己。这种“误伤”的风险让师生关系更紧张了。
王小二
没错。结果就成了一场技术上的“猫鼠游戏”。学校花钱买检测软件,学生就研究怎么骗过软件。时间和精力都浪费在这种无意义的对抗上。
Ema
这太讽刺了,完全偏离了教育的初衷。所以,冲突的焦点不该是“抓作弊”,而是“如何创造一个更支持学习的环境”。这才是问题的根本。
王小二
另一个冲突点在于,AI使用的界限很模糊。用AI检查语法算作弊吗?润色句子呢?生成大纲呢?不同的教授标准完全不同,让学生无所适从。
Ema
是啊,学生就像在走钢丝,一不小心就可能被贴上“学术不端”的标签。所以作者才说,大学首先要做的,是提供一个稳定、公平的竞赛环境。
王小二
说得对。先解决自身的问题:选择一个统一的考试形式,并坚持下去,给学生一个稳定的预期。否则,讨论运动员是否犯规就显得很可笑。
Ema
归根结底,这场冲突反映了传统教育和新技术、新现实的矛盾。它迫使我们去思考一个更深层的问题:在AI时代,到底什么才是真正的“学习”?
王小二
确实,AI的影响远超作弊辩论。它正在动摇高等教育的根基。首先就是大学的核心价值,过去大学是知识的权威来源,但现在AI让信息唾手可得。
Ema
没错,大学作为“信息垄断者”的地位被削弱了。所以它们必须找到新的价值定位。比如,从“知识的传授者”转变为“能力的培养者”。
王小二
正是如此。大学应该重点培养AI无法替代的能力,比如如何提出好问题、如何批判性地评估AI信息、如何利用AI去创新。这些才是核心竞争力。
Ema
这个转变很关键。就像以前教我们怎么去图书馆查资料,现在就该教我们怎么有效地“提问”AI。这是一种新的“信息素养”,课程和教学都得跟上。
王小二
另一个深远影响,是对评估方式的颠覆。传统的闭卷考试和论文,在AI面前很脆弱。这迫使教育者去思考更多样化、更侧重过程的评估方法。
Ema
比如,可能会有更多的口头答辩、项目制学习,或者让你提交一份“与AI的对话记录”,来展示思考过程。重点不再是结果,而是过程本身。
王小二
此外,AI对教育公平性也是一把双刃剑。一方面,它可以为资源不足的学生提供个性化辅导。但另一方面,付费的强大AI工具,也可能加剧数字鸿沟。
Ema
是的,好的方面是,偏远地区的学生也能接触到顶尖知识。坏的方面是,富裕家庭的孩子用着更高级的AI,优势可能会越来越大。
王小二
作者还提了一个我们容易忽略的影响:环境成本。驱动AI的数据中心消耗巨大的能源。当数百万学生高频使用时,对环境的负担不容小觑。
Ema
哇,这个角度很特别,但非常重要。我们享受着AI的便利,却很少想它背后的环境代价。这提醒我们,任何技术进步都不是免费的。
王小二
总的来说,AI的影响是全方位的。它改变了知识获取、评估体系,并对教育公平和可持续性提出了新挑战。大学正处在一个必须做出选择的十字路口。
Ema
是的,这个影响是结构性的,不可逆转。大学不能再假装一切照旧。关键问题是:我们如何利用它的优势,减轻它的负面影响,共同走向未来?
王小二
展望未来,一个明确的共识是:AI已是教育中不可逆转的一部分。问题不再是“是否”接纳,而是“如何”接纳,这需要所有人共同努力。
Ema
对,堵不如疏。最好的方式就是积极引导。作者建议,大学必须为AI使用制定清晰的指导方针,明确告诉学生“合理”和“被接受”的界限在哪里。
王小二
这一点至关重要。清晰的规则能消除学生的不安和猜测,让他们知道行为的边界。比如,构思阶段可以用,但直接复制粘贴就不行。这是建立信任的第一步。
Ema
没错。未来我们可能会看到更多大学推出“AI素养”必修课。教学生如何负责任地、有道德地使用AI,就像教如何引用文献一样,这是基本功。
王小二
另一个趋势,是AI将推动教育更加个性化。AI可以像个数字导师,根据每个学生的进度和风格,提供定制化的练习和反馈,真正实现“因材施教”。
Ema
我非常期待这一点!想象一下,学生在某个知识点卡住了,AI能立即为他生成不同例子来解释。这种即时、耐心的辅导,是人类教师很难大规模做到的。
王小二
最终,未来的教育需要培养能与AI协同工作的人才。重点不再是记忆知识,而是提出创造性问题,整合复杂信息,以及进行高级批判性思维。
Ema
是的,我们不应该再用旧的眼光去看待新一代的学生和他们使用的工具。未来的学生身份正在快速改变。理解、适应和引导,才是正确的道路。
王小二
今天我们从一名学生的视角,探讨了AI在教育中普及的深层原因。我们发现,这不仅是技术问题,更是教育体系挑战的体现。学生的“拥抱AI”是一种理性的应对。
Ema
是的,与其指责学生,不如反思那个让他们别无选择的系统。未来的关键在于建立清晰规则,培养“AI素养”,将AI转化为强大的学习工具。这是一个挑战,更是机遇。
王小二
今天的讨论就到这里。感谢您的收听。这里是 <Goose Pod>,我们明天再见。

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

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Impact+
Future+

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