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With AI writing, higher education should prioritise academic policy and student support

A year since ChatGPT emerged, universities must learn how to incorporate AI writing into teaching and learning, rather than fear it
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Turnitin
30 Nov 2023
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Turnitin session at DU Europe 2023
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When ChatGPT launched in November 2022, universities scrambled to work out how to address generative AI in the classroom. Some banned it, while others quickly incorporated it into their curriculum.

At a session during the 2023 91茄子 Digital Universities event, held in partnership with , Aaron Yaverski, Turnitin鈥檚 regional vice-president for EMEA, shared his views on the direction that higher education should take with generative AI.

Turnitin鈥檚 new launched in April 2023 and as of November 2023, a year since ChatGPT鈥檚 debut, it has reviewed more than 142 million papers to detect AI writing.

Yaverski said AI writing detection needs to be thought about differently. 鈥淲e need to move past focusing solely on detection and misconduct,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t is just one piece of a much broader and more . Turnitin鈥檚 AI writing detection feature is not meant to replace educators鈥 professional discretion. It is meant to supply additional insights to help reach a decision.鈥

Yaverski said an effective way he鈥檚 seen instructors use the AI detector is to identify where students have used it in their work and discuss how they could use it better in the future. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not detection from a perspective of, 鈥榟ow can I punish you?鈥 But rather, 鈥榟ow can I help you write better with it?鈥欌 Generative AI can be an effective tool for basic discovery and assisting students who are learning in a second language, allowing students to focus on critical thinking.

A common challenge Yaverski sees is a lack of an institution-wide policy, which means decisions are being made on a departmental or instructor level. 鈥淲hat we鈥檙e doing is causing a massive amount of confusion for the student. We鈥檝e put our students in a difficult position,鈥 he said.

Updating academic policies to include the use of AI in writing is vital. But for many institutions, such policies are lacking. A 2023 Tyton , called Time for Class, found that only three per cent of higher education institutions in the US have an AI policy, while 58 per cent said they were planning to develop one.

According to the study, about half of the surveyed students had already used AI to write some of their work, while 70 per cent of instructors had never used the technology. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a disconnect where we have students actively leveraging the tool and instructors who may not be familiar with it. We have to narrow the gap as we think about those policies,鈥 Yaverski said.

Yaverski said that while Turnitin doesn鈥檛 write a policy for institutions, the company offers to educators and institutions to help them navigate this evolving technology. He said that, globally, universities are confused about policy, but highlighted that some regions and institutions are making progress.

鈥淲e are seeing pockets of the world where they鈥檙e much more progressive about AI. In Saudi Arabia, a number of institutions are encouraging the use of AI in writing, whereas in other regions we鈥檝e seen much more resistance,鈥 Yaverski said.

A key to success is involving students and considering employability in AI policy creation. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to be learning over time how our students want to use these tools and how the market wants to use it,鈥 Yaverski said. They will be the ones who determine the new uses for AI as they continue their learning journeys and careers. Turnitin is committed to being a trusted educational partner, ready to support them as new developments emerge, he concluded.

The panel:

  • Alistair Lawrence, head of branded content, Times Higher Education (chair)
  • Aaron Yaverski, regional vice-president (EMEA), Turnitin

about Turnitin.

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