{"id":218,"date":"2026-05-26T11:39:37","date_gmt":"2026-05-26T11:39:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/cityrelocationnews.com\/?p=218"},"modified":"2026-05-26T11:39:37","modified_gmt":"2026-05-26T11:39:37","slug":"the-despair-of-the-professor-in-the-age-of-a-i","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/cityrelocationnews.com\/?p=218","title":{"rendered":"The Despair of the Professor in the Age of A.I."},"content":{"rendered":"<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div><span><em>You\u2019re reading <strong>Fault Lines<\/strong>, Jay Caspian Kang\u2019s weekly column on politics and the media.<\/em><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>In my writing, and in my idle thoughts, I often return to Arjuna\u2019s lament upon surveying the battlefield of Kurukshetra and finding that he must kill his friends and family. What is his duty in that extraordinary moment? What is my duty, then, in far more ordinary and less harrowing circumstances?<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/cityrelocationnews.com\/?p=216\">How a Small-Town Clerk\u2019s Misdeeds Upturned the Murdaugh Verdict<\/a><\/p>\n<p>This question, which unfolds throughout a conversation with Krishna, appears in the first chapter of the Bhagavad Gita, a book I somehow did not know existed until I took a Hinduism class in college. I was not a good student, routinely skipping class, but, worried that there would be a price to pay for my truancy and bad grades, I tried, sometimes. A few books got read, including the Gita, which I didn\u2019t really understand until my professor\u2014the sort of charming, gray-haired stoic found in religion departments of liberal-arts colleges across New England\u2014explained, in a capacious and friendly way, that one should do their duty without considering the outcome. And, even though I don\u2019t remember doing particularly well in that class, I have spent the last twenty-five years thinking about Arjuna\u2019s despair and Krishna\u2019s command.<\/p>\n<div><\/div>\n<p>When I think about whether my nine-year-old will need to go to college, I mostly hope she won\u2019t, because I don\u2019t think this country should rely so heavily on a credentialling system that\u2019s far too expensive, inaccessible, and time-consuming to be worth it. But I do worry that she will miss out on experiences like mine, when a nineteen-year-old was forced to read something he wouldn\u2019t have otherwise and was guided toward a revelation, however banal or vain, by a patient professor. How do you place a value on something like that?<\/p>\n<p>There will always be idealistic, ink-stained people who want to devote their lives to scholarly pursuits\u2014their role to inspire young people to love ideas as they do. But this transfer, more than anything else in the academy, has been increasingly blocked by A.I. in the classroom. This past April, Jane Sloan Peters, a professor of religious studies, wrote a stirring Substack post in which she described a course she had designed, some years ago, about what people throughout history have been willing to endure for their faith. The class, called \u201cLetters from Prison,\u201d typically culminated in students trying to synthesize an overriding theme about what they had read. \u201cWhen I began teaching this course four years ago, students struggled to come up with their own themes,\u201d Peters wrote. But, through brainstorming and revision, the students would ultimately land on some understanding that both felt personal to them and proved they had grappled with the assigned texts.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p>Last year, the struggle ended\u2014or, at least, got subverted. \u201cNot one of my sixty students in \u2018Letters from Prison\u2019 struggled with this task,\u201d she wrote. \u201cI received tidy summaries of the text\u2014the kind of compelling reviews you\u2019d find on a book jacket\u2014as well as perfectly vapid course themes that somehow took account of everything while not saying much.\u201d What Peters suspected was that many of the students had asked A.I. to help. Like so many professors who have been confronted with the dispiriting new reality of student work, Peters adjusted, adding some handwritten brainstorming processes to her course, in the hope of making it A.I.-proof. But when she presented these new expectations to her students, something unexpected happened. \u201cA wave of sadness washed over me, and I actually got choked up in front of the class.\u201d Peters writes. \u201c \u2018Before AI,\u2019 I told them, \u2018Students used to work hard to come up with their own ideas. I\u2019d help, and they\u2019d struggle, but they\u2019d come to something that was their own. That doesn\u2019t happen anymore and I <em>grieve<\/em> <em>that<\/em>.\u2019 \u201d<\/p>\n<p>In the past few years, I\u2019ve spoken to a number of academics and instructors at the college and high-school level who have said similar things. They talk about a sense of loss and of despair, because the one thing that brought them meaning has been erased, or blotted out, by the arrival of A.I. Most, like Peters, do not blame the students, nor do they believe all students welcome the changes wrought by the new technology. \u201cI\u2019ve seen students respond with this disdain for teachers who just let A.I. use happen,\u201d Peters said. \u201cThere\u2019s this indignance, like, \u2018Why don\u2019t you want more from us than this?\u2019 So, even if they\u2019re using it, they\u2019re still wanting us to hold them to a higher standard.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThis is an exacerbation of a transactional model of education that has lasted for a long time,\u201d Peters told me. Students are told that they\u2019re in school to get a degree, one that comes with a high price tag and, for many, a debt burden. They are told that they will be assessed by the work they turn in. And, because A.I. allows them to turn in what Peters admitted was superficially \u201cpretty good quality material,\u201d they might not see why it\u2019s such a big deal when they can\u2019t explain what they have generated. \u201cThere are these waves of relief that wash over me when I see misspellings and poor grammatical structure in sentences,\u201d Peters said. \u201cWhen I can tell that they\u2019re really working through it themselves.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The teachers and professors I\u2019ve spoken to have varying perspectives on what A.I. is doing and what it may yet do. But common concerns emerge. What follows are testimonials from eleven faculty members at colleges across the country on how A.I. has changed their work.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Susanna F. Boxall<\/strong><\/p>\n<div>Lecturer in philosophy, California State University, Chico<\/div>\n<p>I am very grim about the outlook of my career. I am about to be forty-five; if my job still exists by the time I am fifty, I will consider myself lucky.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p>The introduction of A.I., plus the demographic cliff, has had a devastating effect on higher ed. I think that big research schools will weather the storm, but lower-tier universities like mine will shrink or go away entirely. Already before <em>COVID<\/em>, there was a big push for online education; post-<em>COVID<\/em>, many programs switched to online to survive. However, with the introduction of A.I., all of those programs have become diploma mills. I taught online before and after A.I. In the pre-A.I. era, online education was qualitatively inferior to the in-person experience, but it was not a joke. Now, online classes are a simulacrum of education: the students pretend to learn, and I have to pretend that I am teaching them something.<\/p>\n<p>In-person classes can still maintain some degree of rigor, and cheating can be reduced to zero as long as all assignments are done in the classroom. The problem is that this is not a solution to the enshittification of education\u2014I can no longer assign papers because seventy to a hundred per cent of the students will use A.I. This term, I was able to do a comprehensive oral final with a single class because it was a small seminar with eleven students. Even then, I had to book a room for a six-hour slot in order to have a meaningful conversation with my students\u2014scaling this when you have a hundred and fifty-plus students is impossible. Furthermore, because not all faculty are as concerned as I am about A.I. use, and because the students are using A.I. in online classes, the students are much less cognitively capable than they used to be.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Kevin Sun<\/strong><\/p>\n<div>Teaching assistant professor of computer science, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill<\/div>\n<p>I\u2019m quite pessimistic about the impact of A.I. on both education broadly and my career personally, given the recent decline in C.S. enrollment.<\/p>\n<p>The most obvious change in my teaching has been the elimination of difficult homework problems, which used to be a major component of my course. I\u2019ve been trying to lean into social pressure as a source of motivation for students to learn, with group quizzes and in-class presentations, but there\u2019s only so much an individual instructor can do given the systemic forces of A.I., grade inflation, the job market, student evaluations, etc. I\u2019m worried that these forces allow many students to coast through school without learning as much as they used to. I acknowledge Bryan Caplan\u2019s point that college is mostly about signalling, not learning, so it\u2019ll survive as long as it\u2019s a useful signalling device to employers. But, as college gets easier, the signal gets weaker, so who knows how things will change.<\/p>\n<p>On a positive note, A.I. has helped me write course syllabi, lecture plans, exams, etc. It\u2019s possible to use A.I. to grade and\/or provide feedback to students\u2014though I haven\u2019t done so yet. I have also used A.I. to help me create in-class assignments in which students evaluate A.I.-generated code\/content. In C.S., A.I. has shifted the emphasis from writing code to evaluating code. To train students in this, I present them with A.I.-generated code that is either correct or subtly incorrect, and I ask them to evaluate it.<\/p>\n<p>I have a colleague who has completely embraced A.I. My understanding is that his course is much harder than it used to be, but students are allowed to use A.I. during exams. I see the motivation\u2014A.I. is supposed to enhance our skills\/productivity, so students should be expected to produce more\u2014but I don\u2019t want to create a situation where students are helplessly dependent on A.I. because they don\u2019t have a solid grasp of the fundamentals.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Daniel Silver<\/strong><\/p>\n<div>Professor of sociology, University of Toronto, Scarborough<\/div>\n<p>A.I. has fundamentally changed how I teach, and it demands basic reflection about what we are trying to accomplish. It has added a huge amount to my workload this year, since I spent a lot of that time trying to create new types of sociology assignments. The idea, basically, is to create multi-agent simulations where students create representations of the theories of writers like Adam Smith or Max Weber, and then they experiment with them. This was a huge commitment from me, the students, and the T.A.s, but it was worth it. The best final projects showed far more creativity and intellectual work than the typical second-year essay would have.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p>Beyond that, students still would use A.I. in a thoughtless way, as a replacement for their thought and judgment. So I made a point to just call them on it, and make them meet with me personally. I saw dozens of students, often for thirty- to forty-five-minute conversations. I wanted to understand where they were coming from. I would give them a zero on the assignment and allow them to redo it, after we talked about intelligent use. They usually improved, but not always. I felt that the act of meeting them was the most important part, so they felt that somebody, especially a professor, was paying attention to them and what they produced, which, alas, is rare in larger universities.<\/p>\n<p>I also show them \u201creplacement-level work,\u201d on the model of the sports analytics concept of \u201cwins above replacement.\u201d These are basically variations of A.I.-generated versions of assignments. The students can see clearly how they all kind of look the same. Those are C-level answers, at best, and the students know they need to produce work that is better than what the replacement would be.<\/p>\n<p>Over all, A.I. did really knock me out of a fairly comfortable set of teaching habits, which is producing a lot of emotional upheaval. But I do feel we all, including the students, are learning how to live with it, and we\u2019ll come out better on the other side.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Elizabeth Strom<\/strong><\/p>\n<div>Associate professor, School of Public Affairs, University of South Florida<\/div>\n<p>I teach a lot of fully online classes. There is really no way you can prevent use of A.I. in a fully online class. There are a few situations where A.I. responses are so off the wall I can give the student an F on the assignment, but most of the time it can be difficult to figure out the provenance of a short essay written by a student I\u2019ve never met. They don\u2019t know me or, often, the other students in the class, so there are fewer social norms that reinforce doing their own work. Usually a handful of students will be very interested in the topic and take advantage of the many opportunities to meet with me in person or on MS Teams, and make an effort to complete the readings and discuss assignments with me, but they are the minority. For others, it\u2019s just an easy way to get three credits. I have tried to frame assignments to make it harder to avoid doing the reading\u2014I ask for citations, for page numbers, for their opinion. I try to come up with engaging assignments: debate this topic! Role play this scenario! Turn this into a meme! But it is possible to game those requirements and hard for me to discern the originality of the work.<\/p>\n<p>The university doesn\u2019t have any sort of policy on the use of A.I. other than \u201cfollow the guidance of your instructor,\u201d so I don\u2019t think students are even getting a consistent message. And while some faculty will claim they can <em>always<\/em> recognize A.I.-generated assignments, I don\u2019t think that\u2019s the case when you are reading fifty short essays. There have been times when students have handed in gibberish that is clearly A.I.-generated work that they didn\u2019t bother to check against the assignment, and other times when the work is so generic and lacking in detail that it\u2019s clear they did not do the reading. But there is no definitive way to check, and with fifty students I don\u2019t want to spend my time playing \u201cCSI: Who Wrote This Paper?\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p><strong>Neal Hebert<\/strong><\/p>\n<div>Assistant professor, department of visual and performing arts, Grambling State University<\/div>\n<p>I\u2019m a theatre professor, and when I teach plays I\u2019m not looking at them as literature\u2014instead, I ask my students to imagine these scripts are like the bones of a human body, and the way you get a full human is when you use those bones to \u201crealize\u201d a play onstage. The students have to write papers, but these aren\u2019t research papers. Instead, I ask them, for example, to list two words that they feel describe the physical world of the play, and then write a paragraph explaining why they picked those words. The idea is to get students thinking like possible collaborators on a show: designers, actors, and directors.<\/p>\n<p>I was excited the first time I got to read my students\u2019 papers on August Wilson\u2019s \u201cFences.\u201d I selected that play because students could both read the script and watch the film if they want to experience it like that before writing the paper. In an intro class, I have to assume that, for some students, this might be the first play they\u2019ve ever read, and they might need help to visualize it.<\/p>\n<p>Out of forty students, the vast majority chose similar words, phrasing, and concepts, and most papers were written in that inimitable ChatGPT style: \u201cThis isn\u2019t a simple story about injustice\u2014it\u2019s a clarion call for a positive understanding of justice.\u201d If you\u2019re a prof like me who also has ten or so years of public-high-school teaching in English and theatre fairly recently, the pattern of words spit out by LLMs is really easy to spot. It\u2019s like elevator muzak, but in words.<\/p>\n<p>I have since revised the assignment. I scour lesser-known anthologies for plays that have been rarely produced or published, and are too obscure for ChatGPT to learn about. If ChatGPT is used on these assignments now, it hallucinates characters, plotlines\u2014it just makes shit up, since it has nothing to go on. I tell students that ChatGPT is disallowed from their writing process, that I can immediately tell when ChatGPT has been used, and that I will fail the student on this assignment if it is used\u2014and, potentially, for the entire course, if we go through a formal appeals process. I\u2019ve stopped being a collaborator in these intro courses and started being a plagiarism cop, and I do resent that a bit. I wanted to be the kind of professor my professors were for me.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/cityrelocationnews.com\/?p=214\">Act of Faith<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Even in my upper division courses, I still sometimes get fake papers. I tell my theatre majors, \u201cI get paid the same whether I pass you or fail you. But what you\u2019ve just done is told me and everyone else in our department that you are so lazy you would rather outsource your collaboration to an app than risk being an artist.\u201d Sometimes that gets them to write the paper honestly. Sometimes it doesn\u2019t\u2014and I can\u2019t prove it in a historical drama class, because so many of the plays I have to teach are canonical, and were used to train the A.I. models.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p>I worry that if we start to produce students who can\u2019t be bothered to read and think about the plays they are performing in\u2014or may one day perform in\u2014then the next generation of theatre professionals will only be able to meet and critique the world in which they live in the most pedestrian and boring ways possible. Can you imagine A.I. Performing Arts Slop? The theatrical equivalent of the images ChatGPT and its competitors spit out, soulless and inert, arriving on stage stillborn? I can.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Lauren Aulet<\/strong><\/p>\n<div>Assistant professor, department of psychological and brain sciences, the University of Massachusetts, Amherst<\/div>\n<p>The tension around A.I. in higher education feels less like a simple administration-vs.-faculty divide and more like a mismatch between the speed of institutional response and the slower, unresolved pedagogical questions faculty are facing in the classroom. Universities are understandably trying to respond to A.I. quickly, but faculty are often the ones dealing with the hardest implementation questions: what counts as student work, how assessment should change, and how to preserve the kinds of struggle and independent thinking that learning depends on.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time, I do think A.I. has expanded what I can do scientifically. For me, the biggest effect is that it lowers the cost of trying things computationally (i.e., with code). Coding is a fairly ubiquitous part of my job and I can now move more quickly from an idea to an analysis script or proof of concept. That does not replace scientific judgment, but it does make certain ideas feel more testable than they would have before.<\/p>\n<p>So the tension for me is that the same tools that can be genuinely useful for research can also be destabilizing for education. \u201cA.I. helps me code\u201d does not straightforwardly translate into \u201cA.I. is good for universities.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>Auyon Siddiq<\/strong><\/p>\n<div>Associate professor of decisions, operations, and technology management, Anderson School of Management, University of California, Los Angeles<\/div>\n<p>Our administration has definitely encouraged faculty to be A.I.-forward, but adoption across faculty varies. The default policy is that A.I. is permitted, and it is up to the faculty member to specify when it is prohibited.<\/p>\n<p>I teach the core statistics class for first-year M.B.A.s, and we encourage use of A.I. for the gritty details (e.g., coding) so students can focus on concepts. We actually made our exam a hundred per cent A.I.-friendly, as an experiment, with the only constraint being you can\u2019t use your phone to take photos of the exam. The class average was still only seventy-five per cent, because the students who were truly lost apparently weren\u2019t saved by A.I. But this could change in the future.<\/p>\n<p>Interestingly, voluntary uptake of these tools is also mixed across students. In many cases, students haven\u2019t really used them regularly until they are required to do so in my class. But this is also changing rapidly.<\/p>\n<p>A.I. is definitely making me rethink teaching. Honestly it has freed up mental bandwidth to think more about my lecture structure, pacing, anecdotes and case studies, and so on, rather than being consumed by the mechanics of making PowerPoint slides and homework assignments. So, personally, I find it very exciting. Of course, there\u2019s the lingering anxiety that we might be replaced entirely by A.I., although I don\u2019t think that is likely to happen anytime soon. I think there will always be demand for human relationships, even (and maybe especially?) in higher education.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p><strong>David Roach<\/strong><\/p>\n<div>Assistant professor of history, Campbellsville University<\/div>\n<p>I have seen a shocking and discouraging amount of A.I. in the classroom. I have to teach a few online classes every year, and I would estimate that half of my students have used A.I. on these assignments. In two in-person history surveys I taught recently, I believe that a little over half of the students used A.I. on their last short paper.<\/p>\n<p>Initially, I responded, for my in-person classes, by de\u00ebmphasizing out-of-class writing, and, for my online classes, by devising ways of policing the assignments: prompts that might trigger incorrect answers from A.I., hidden words that had to do with the assignment but might get the A.I. talking about a different speech or document. But both of these techniques have negatively affected student learning and my experience teaching. I believe that students need to practice putting their thoughts in an essay\u2014they need the friction and difficulty of putting words together and learning how to think. So I\u2019m frustrated because I cannot teach how I want to teach.<\/p>\n<p>I have also come to believe that students now know how difficult it is for faculty to prove A.I. cheating. Early on, a couple of months after ChatGPT hit the scene, and before many faculty became aware of it, I had a typo in a prompt that helped me catch A.I. cheating. I met with eight students, about ten per cent of the class, and all but one of them admitted to using A.I. This last year, in many meetings with students about A.I., only one of them admitted to using it.<\/p>\n<p>My emotional response to all this is hard to describe, something between disgust and despair. Was it always the case that half of our students would cheat if it were easy enough? If they knew that it would be hard to prove? It\u2019s hard to consider that and not despair.<\/p>\n<p><strong>David Song<\/strong><\/p>\n<div>Professor of Asian American studies, East Los Angeles College<\/div>\n<p>In my classes I allow some A.I. utilization but with appropriate attribution and all the usual academic-honesty provisions. Of course, no one bothers with that, even with the content that\u2019s blatantly generated.<\/p>\n<p>With community-college students, many are just trying to complete their general-education requirements, so there\u2019s generally less investment in actual learning and more focus on checking off all the boxes before they transfer out. I suppose that would be the case in any institution with grad requirements. The most rampant abuse is generally with the asynchronous online courses where students are faceless.<\/p>\n<p>This brings up another major problem that seems more specific to community colleges. A lot of financial-aid fraud has apparently taken place, with fake students enrolling in classes and using A.I. to actually complete various assignments. That started a few years back. I remember sensing something was off in my intro to Asian American history class when I would read student introductions and there would be, like, three to four students with generic Wasp-sounding names\u2014our student body is predominantly Latino, with a smaller percentage of Asians\u2014writing introductory posts about how they have already taken other classes in Asian American issues and literature, and that just sounded like bullshit.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p><strong>Beth Ritter-Conn<\/strong><\/p>\n<div>Assistant professor of religion, Belmont University<\/div>\n<p>The erosion of trust between faculty and students has been the hardest part for me. the magical thing about teaching, especially teaching undergraduates, is that, at its best, it is this experience of discovery and curiosity, people trying ideas on for size and seeing what still fits them from their upbringing and what they need to leave behind so they can grow. There is trial and error, there are mistakes that lead to revelations, and the classroom is this safe laboratory where you get to do that in conversation with your peers who are all doing the same thing. These days, I feel like I can\u2019t trust my students to be willing to make that mess with me in quite the same way.<\/p>\n<p>The tipping point was last year when I had Honors students\u2014Honors students!\u2014using A.I. to write reflection journals. Literally the only task there is \u201ctell me what you are thinking inside your own head.\u201d There is no right or wrong answer. It\u2019s just, Give me your thoughts on this thing. And I had students who outsourced that task to the robots. I can\u2019t give honest feedback when it is not honest work. I can\u2019t help you work out how you want to think about something, how you want to be in the world, if you are not using your own brain to tell me where you are. We also can\u2019t have an honest and meaningful class discussion about a specific text if people are using A.I. to summarize the assigned texts.<\/p>\n<p>So there\u2019s just so much that feels like this new barrier to the whole process of a liberal-arts education. I\u2019ve made some adjustments to my pedagogical strategies since last year. We\u2019re doing more in-class writing; I\u2019m doing in-class, pen-and-paper exams rather than using our learning management system. I\u2019m being kind of a stickler about requiring hard copies of textbooks and requiring in-class notes to be taken by hand, and requiring phones and laptops to be put away. Things have gone better this academic year. But it still just feels like this extra thing I have to police (or else just give up and decide not to).<\/p>\n<p><strong>Jeremiah Croster<\/strong><\/p>\n<div>Instructor in English, Houston City College<\/div>\n<p>Houston City College is a large, urban community college with open admission. It\u2019s one of the most international community colleges in the United States\u2014we get a lot of students from Africa, Asia, Mexico, and Central America, a few from South America, and even Europe (for some reason that I can\u2019t figure out, we get a lot of Kazakhstanis). We also have a lot of students from the city. I could easily have a class with thirty per cent immigrants, thirty per cent Houston natives, and thirty per cent people who\u2019ve moved here from other parts of the U.S. A significant majority of our students are either Hispanic or Black, and, again, within those populations, there\u2019s a good mix of immigrants and native Houstonians. Students are pretty diverse in age, too. The majority of my students are in their early twenties, but an average class has three or four students older than thirty and I often have a student or two older than me. Economically, our students are generally poor or working-class. They are often negotiating difficult home lives. Once in a blue moon you get someone from the middle-class whose parents are just opting to save money by sending them to community college, but it\u2019s rare.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p>The first year after ChatGPT was introduced wasn\u2019t too bad. It was the spring semester of 2024 when the shit really hit the fan and everyone was using it. There just isn\u2019t much unique voice in the writing anymore. I\u2019d say in that first year of heavy use, probably fifty to sixty per cent of my in-person students were using it and had that homogenized voice. In the online classes that I teach, it\u2019s easily at eighty to ninety per cent.<\/p>\n<p>I do a few things. For in-person classes, I use blue book essays now. It does help, but it also prevents students from developing their thinking on their own time. I used to tell students to take a walk for inspiration if they were struggling with what to write, but that isn\u2019t possible with blue books. For shorter assignments, I\u2019ve switched from written responses to video responses\u2014students upload video of themselves talking. Some of them still read off a screen, but most of them just say what they\u2019re thinking. Finally, I now deduct points from essays for the common tropes of A.I. writing: lists of three, overuse of adjectives, etc. In my experience, ChatGPT is still a pretty bad writer and can\u2019t hack the existential risk involved in spitting out a compelling thesis.<\/p>\n<p>When it comes to my own future, I\u2019m not too worried: I\u2019m forty-nine and I think I can hang on until my retirement plan kicks in. When it comes to the future of teaching college writing in particular, I\u2019m less optimistic. Faculty are mostly opposed to using A.I. in classrooms, but some embrace it, and the administration is convinced it\u2019s the greatest invention since sliced bread\u2014they\u2019re actively trying to get resistant faculty on board. I just haven\u2019t seen any good use for it in the classroom, at all. I know there are fields like biomedical engineering where A.I. might help speed up research processes that will yield medical advances, but that\u2019s very different from the work we do in the liberal arts and especially in the humanities.<\/p>\n<p>A buddy of mine used to say that there are two approaches you can take to college learning: one approach is to help students get an education and the other is to help them get a degree. The get-a-degree approach was already winning even before A.I., but now that it\u2019s here, the education part is starting to feel like something someone will write about in a history book. Or maybe A.I. will do it.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/cityrelocationnews.com\/?p=212\">Why Any Plausible Iran Deal Is a Humiliation for Trump<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u201cWas it always the case that half of our students would cheat if it were easy enough?\u201d Jay Caspian Kang reports.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":217,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[5],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-218","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-fault-lines"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.6 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>The Despair of the Professor in the Age of A.I. - City Relocation News<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/cityrelocationnews.com\/?p=218\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"The Despair of the Professor in the Age of A.I. - 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