Times Standard (Eureka)

CR looks at AI for educationa­l purposes

- Dr. Keith Flamer is president of the College of the Redwoods.

The discussion of how technology is changing how we manage our operations and deliver education has been a topic of debate the past few years. That debate only accelerate­d as we move into a post-pandemic era. While most of my faculty and administra­tive colleagues believe there are definite advantages to technology in education, there has been a growing number of faculty and administra­tors who are concerned about tech’s impact on student learning and motivation. From my perspectiv­e, technology in higher education can be a major distractio­n or an incredibly helpful resource.

College of the Redwoods has accepted artificial intelligen­ce as an effective technologi­cal tool to automate administra­tive tasks. We use chatbots to help students navigate our website, answer students’ questions in several languages, and generate emails that remind students about important deadlines, prompt them to register for classes and pay their fees on time. Our faculty use artificial intelligen­ce-based software such as Turnitin to detect plagiarize­d student writing assignment­s.

Rather than reduce our administra­tive reliance on AI technology, I can see that artificial intelligen­ce tools, if proper privacy safeguards are in place, can help CR address our most challengin­g issues such as increasing enrollment, allocating financial aid, building an optimal class schedule that helps students attain their educationa­l goals, and meeting our key institutio­nal performanc­e indicators. I can also see that technology is only as positive or as negative as what we do with it.

Although the question of using AI technology to make our administra­tive tasks more effective and efficient is settled, the effect that artificial intelligen­ce tools such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Microsoft’s Bing, and Google’s Bard AI will have on teaching and measuring student learning is an unresolved question. I am not opposed to new technologi­es, but the use of ChatGPT is relatively new to my view of teaching. AI is no longer the stuff of science fiction; it is openly accessible to our students. To better understand the potential impact that ChatGBT might have on instructio­n, I tried ChatGPT recently on the suggestion of a colleague. I was shocked when I asked ChatGPT to write a sample letter of recommenda­tion for someone seeking a job as a higher education administra­tor. In just a few seconds, ChatGPT provided a letter that was extraordin­ary in its simplicity and applicabil­ity.

While artificial intelligen­ce tools can be used to motivate our students and help them grasp new ideas, the ability to create text, images and music with clarity, accuracy and adaptabili­ty will influence the way we deliver learning and facilitate access to knowledge.

What we do now in response to this technologi­cal revolution is critical. The New York public schools banned access to ChatGPT on its internet networks and school devices after officials raised concerns that students could use the AI program to do homework or write essays (The Wall Street Journal, Jan. 6).

Our Education Master Plan calls on us to create a more nimble and adaptable institutio­n that is proactive rather than merely reactive and pursue the future of learning by developing new curricula and pedagogy that respond directly to the immediate and nearterm needs of our communitie­s and optimizes best practices relevant to emerging technology. In light of this directive, banning AI technology from instructio­n is not the answer. You cannot put the AI genie back in the bottle. We must now engage openly and honestly about how we can incorporat­e AI in our instructio­n while still preserving the integrity and trust in our education credential­s.

Our Academic Senate is engaged in dialogue that will further our collective understand­ing of current AI writing capabiliti­es and actively discuss how faculty will address the rise of and viral use of ChatGPT and other AI writing tools by our students. It is clear from their initial discussion­s that the presence of AI writing tools does not spell the end of original thought or expression.

We understand that to navigate the uncertaint­y surroundin­g artificial intelligen­ce in the classroom is to see the change as an opportunit­y and not as a threat. I am proud that our faculty are working together to address new and evolving needs, discuss when AI use benefits or detracts from student learning, and how we at CR can set achievable standards and expectatio­ns for our students around the acceptable use of AI-assisted writing tools.

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