Student and Faculty Perceptions of Generative Artificial Intelligence in Student Writing

被引:1
|
作者
Hostetter, Autumn B. [1 ]
Call, Natalie [1 ]
Frazier, Grace [1 ]
James, Tristan [1 ]
Linnertz, Cassandra [1 ]
Nestle, Elizabeth [1 ]
Tucci, Miaflora [1 ]
机构
[1] Kalamazoo Coll, Dept Psychol, 1200 Acad St, Kalamazoo, MI 49006 USA
关键词
student writing; generative artificial intelligence; plagiarism; TO-LEARN ASSIGNMENTS; PSYCHOLOGY; RETENTION;
D O I
10.1177/00986283241279401
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Background Psychology instructors frequently assign writing-to-learn exercises that include personal reflection. Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) can write text that passes for humans in other domains.Objective Do students and faculty rate a reflection written by GenAI differently than reflections written by students? Do students and faculty agree about the appropriateness of using GenAI for college-level writing?Method Eighty-three students and 82 faculty read four reflections (three written by undergraduate students and one by GenAI). After rating the quality of each, they chose which one they thought was AI-generated. Participants then rated the ethicality of nine potential ways to use GenAI in college-level writing and the potential of each to compromise learning.Results Participants rated the AI-generated reflection similarly to the student-generated reflections and failed to reliably detect AI-generated writing. Faculty and students agreed that using GenAI to produce the final text for a student likely compromises learning more than using it to generate ideas.Conclusion AI-generated reflections blend in with student-written reflections, and students and faculty agree about the potential detriments to learning.Teaching Implications GenAI can be hard to detect in the psychology classroom. Rather than implementing one-size-fits-all policies, instructors might focus classroom conversations on how GenAI could compromise learning.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Student perceptions of generative artificial intelligence in didactic patient presentations
    Baker, Carrie
    Ghassemi, Emily
    Bowers, Riley
    PHARMACY EDUCATION, 2024, 24 (01): : 590 - 597
  • [2] Student Perceptions of Generative Artificial Intelligence: Investigating Utilization, Benefits, and Challenges in Higher Education
    Almassaad, Ahmad
    Alajlan, Hayat
    Alebaikan, Reem
    SYSTEMS, 2024, 12 (10):
  • [3] Examining Faculty and Student Perceptions of Generative AI in University Courses
    Kim, Junghwan
    Klopfer, Michelle
    Grohs, Jacob R.
    Eldardiry, Hoda
    Weichert, James
    Cox II, Larry A.
    Pike, Dale
    INNOVATIVE HIGHER EDUCATION, 2025,
  • [4] Understanding Student Perceptions of Artificial Intelligence as a Teammate
    Marrone, Rebecca
    Zamecnik, Andrew
    Joksimovic, Srecko
    Johnson, Jarrod
    De Laat, Maarten
    TECHNOLOGY KNOWLEDGE AND LEARNING, 2024,
  • [5] Not quite eye to AI: student and teacher perspectives on the use of generative artificial intelligence in the writing process
    Barrett, Alex
    Pack, Austin
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY IN HIGHER EDUCATION, 2023, 20 (01)
  • [6] Student and faculty perceptions of writing in a foreign language studies major
    Menke, Mandy R.
    Anderson, Ana M.
    FOREIGN LANGUAGE ANNALS, 2019, 52 (02) : 388 - 412
  • [7] Nursing Student and Faculty Attitudes, Perceptions, and Behavioral Intentions of Artificial Intelligence Use in Nursing Education
    Ostick, Mollie
    Mariani, Bette
    Lovecchio, Catherine
    Moriarty, Helene
    NURSING EDUCATION PERSPECTIVES, 2025, 46 (02) : E7 - E11
  • [8] Student, Faculty, and Graduate Teaching Assistant Perceptions of Support Provided by a Graduate Student Writing Centre
    Handford, Victoria
    Dobson, Joe
    Liu, Yuhang
    STUDIES IN SELF-ACCESS LEARNING JOURNAL, 2021, 12 (02): : 148 - 176
  • [9] Robots as Faculty: Student and Faculty Perceptions
    Sampsel, Debi
    Bharwani, Govind
    Mehling, Diane
    Smith, Sherrill
    CLINICAL SIMULATION IN NURSING, 2011, 7 (06) : E209 - E218
  • [10] Generative Artificial Intelligence and Problematic Student E-Mails
    Reisman, Sorel
    COMPUTER, 2024, 57 (09) : 124 - 127