Ethical and effortful: workshopping human and generative AI academic writing collaborations

The launch of Open AI’s ChatGPT in 2022 caused a furore within higher education. While initial reactions were negative – educators imagined the end of the undergraduate essay and an acceleration in academic integrity departures – more recent conversations have emphasised how these tools might enhan...

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Main Author: Johanna Amos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association for Learning Development in Higher Education (ALDinHE) 2024-10-01
Series:Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education
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Online Access:http://journal.aldinhe.ac.uk/index.php/jldhe/article/view/1475
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author Johanna Amos
author_facet Johanna Amos
author_sort Johanna Amos
collection DOAJ
description The launch of Open AI’s ChatGPT in 2022 caused a furore within higher education. While initial reactions were negative – educators imagined the end of the undergraduate essay and an acceleration in academic integrity departures – more recent conversations have emphasised how these tools might enhance teaching and learning experiences. This paper explores one possibility for approaching student use of generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) tools, by considering their use in relation to academic skill development. It focuses on a set of workshops conducted within a graduate professional development course at Queen’s University (Canada) in early 2024. The first workshop examined commonalities in Western, English academic writing structures; identified how demystifying these structures supports academic writing and reading practices; and considered how GenAI tools that utilise large language models (LLMs) mimic these structures to enhance students’ awareness of GenAI’s potential applications and limitations, and to identify the processes inherent in academic work. In the second workshop, students critiqued discipline-specific examples of AI-generated academic assignments. By exploring the qualities of academic writing alongside GenAI outputs, the workshop series invited students to explore the possibilities of what might be achieved through human-AI collaboration and to articulate what can never be replicated by a tool without embodied knowledge. This paper presented this set of workshops as a possible model for discussing GenAI tools with students—a model that demonstrates how GenAI tools might be integrated into students’ academic practices in ways that are ethical and effortful and which support, rather than stifle, student creativity.
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spelling doaj-art-e51d8db7cb764b2d960ba710fb8187c72025-08-20T02:18:01ZengAssociation for Learning Development in Higher Education (ALDinHE)Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education1759-667X2024-10-013210.47408/jldhe.vi32.1475Ethical and effortful: workshopping human and generative AI academic writing collaborationsJohanna Amos0Queen's University, Canada The launch of Open AI’s ChatGPT in 2022 caused a furore within higher education. While initial reactions were negative – educators imagined the end of the undergraduate essay and an acceleration in academic integrity departures – more recent conversations have emphasised how these tools might enhance teaching and learning experiences. This paper explores one possibility for approaching student use of generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) tools, by considering their use in relation to academic skill development. It focuses on a set of workshops conducted within a graduate professional development course at Queen’s University (Canada) in early 2024. The first workshop examined commonalities in Western, English academic writing structures; identified how demystifying these structures supports academic writing and reading practices; and considered how GenAI tools that utilise large language models (LLMs) mimic these structures to enhance students’ awareness of GenAI’s potential applications and limitations, and to identify the processes inherent in academic work. In the second workshop, students critiqued discipline-specific examples of AI-generated academic assignments. By exploring the qualities of academic writing alongside GenAI outputs, the workshop series invited students to explore the possibilities of what might be achieved through human-AI collaboration and to articulate what can never be replicated by a tool without embodied knowledge. This paper presented this set of workshops as a possible model for discussing GenAI tools with students—a model that demonstrates how GenAI tools might be integrated into students’ academic practices in ways that are ethical and effortful and which support, rather than stifle, student creativity. http://journal.aldinhe.ac.uk/index.php/jldhe/article/view/1475generative artificial intelligenceGenAIacademic writingcollaboration
spellingShingle Johanna Amos
Ethical and effortful: workshopping human and generative AI academic writing collaborations
Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education
generative artificial intelligence
GenAI
academic writing
collaboration
title Ethical and effortful: workshopping human and generative AI academic writing collaborations
title_full Ethical and effortful: workshopping human and generative AI academic writing collaborations
title_fullStr Ethical and effortful: workshopping human and generative AI academic writing collaborations
title_full_unstemmed Ethical and effortful: workshopping human and generative AI academic writing collaborations
title_short Ethical and effortful: workshopping human and generative AI academic writing collaborations
title_sort ethical and effortful workshopping human and generative ai academic writing collaborations
topic generative artificial intelligence
GenAI
academic writing
collaboration
url http://journal.aldinhe.ac.uk/index.php/jldhe/article/view/1475
work_keys_str_mv AT johannaamos ethicalandeffortfulworkshoppinghumanandgenerativeaiacademicwritingcollaborations