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Falconer January 2023 Issue

Page 1

Vol. 48, Issue 4, 24 pages

Tuesday, January 24, 2023

Cha

tGPT

Artificial Academics Writ e

me

an e

ssa y

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY ANNA OPALSKY/FALCONER AI ACHIEVEMENT: Since its release, some TPHS students have used ChatGPT, a new artificial intelligence chatbot, on classroom assignments, eliciting concerns from some teachers. As AI technology enters the classroom, educators have begun to adapt their curricula to decrease student use of these platforms and ponder if and how AI should be used in education.

Artificial intelligence chatbots disrupt TPHS classrooms Jacob Zhang

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

With the release of ChatGPT – a large language model designed by OpenAI – artificial intelligence chatbots have found their way into humanities and science classrooms alike, forcing many educators to rethink their teaching methods and curricula. ChatGPT takes questions from users and responds with human-like text. It can craft essays, provide solutions to homework problems and even give relationship advice. “What should I do for Valentine’s Day?” “Plan a romantic dinner with your significant other,” ChatGPT writes. “If you are single, you can still celebrate by treating yourself to something nice.” Many TPHS students have tested

ChatGPT, with some even using it for schoolwork. One senior, who chose to stay anonymous, asked ChatGPT to write a poem for an English assignment. He never submitted it, fearing his teacher would grow suspicious as he found ChatGPT’s writing to be “definitely better” than his own. Another student, who also remained anonymous, said he used ChatGPT to complete five chemistry assignments. “[ChatGPT] prints out the notes, and I copy it down,” he said. “It makes things easier and faster.” David Danks, Professor of Philosophy and Data Science at the University of California, San Diego, labeled ChatGPT as both a positive and negative “disruption” to education. The main fear for educators, like English teacher Sara Boozer, is the

potential loss in critical thinking if students begin using, or worse, relying on ChatGPT for schoolwork. “I’m already seeing this fear of being wrong. This fear of creating our own ideas. I’m concerned [ChatGPT] will feed into that,” she said. With long-established websites like SparkNotes and Chegg that already provide homework answers, taking shortcuts to the solution is nothing new, according to English teacher Brianna Milholland. However, this reliance on the internet for answers – science teacher Brinn Belyea said – cannot be solely blamed on technology. “Our school system has failed at getting students to understand that [learning] is a process, not a product,” he said. “If the product is an answer, then the answer is there – you can get

it from ChatGPT.” Boozer and TPHS Principal Rob Coppo believe assigning more in-class essays can thwart the use of ChatGPT. Students in English teacher Brandon Keller’s class have already started handwriting their assignments. Others, like Milholland, have signed up to test GPTZero, an application that can detect AI-written text. Turnitin, a plagiarism checker used by many TPHS teachers, is also developing a similar feature. As of now, ChatGPT’s answers are often inaccurate, as it produces answers using statistical patterns in language and does not fact-check, according to Danks. Edward Sun (12), who tried ChatGPT for coding, said it usually makes mistakes on complicated problems. continued on A2


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