Must Read Blog April 25, 2023

Generative AI in Higher Education: From Fear to Experimentation, Embracing AI’s Potential

In November of 2022, OpenAI released ChatGPT, a generative AI writing tool, sending shockwaves through education. While generative AI technology is not new, ChatGPT has made it accessible, intuitive, and free, catapulting the tool into the mainstream spotlight.

Following the release of ChatGPT, Tyton Partners fielded a national survey in February and March 2023 as part of our longitudinal research series, Time for Class, to gather the perspectives of students, instructors, and administrators in higher education.

Higher education is beyond the point of no return

The 2,000 instructors and administrators surveyed reported concern and fear over issues of academic integrity brought on by generative AI tools. “Preventing student cheating” jumped to the top instructional challenge reported by instructors in 2023, up from the 10th in 2022. Despite this concern, institutions have been slow to respond with policy changes: only 3% of institutions have developed a formal policy regarding the use of AI tools, and most (58%) indicated they will begin to develop one “soon.” Instructors and institutional leaders are grappling with fundamental questions about how to use writing as an assessment in a world where former approaches to ensuring academic integrity are radically changed.

Our national survey of 2,000 2- and 4-year college students made it clear that there is no turning back now: 51% of students will continue to use generative AI tools even if it were prohibited by their instructors or institutions. For the 27% of students that are currently using generative AI tools, that number jumps to 69%, demonstrating the value students see and are gaining from these tools.

Tyton Partners Time for Class 2023: Student Likelihood to Use AI Writing Tools, Even If Prohibited chart

Seeking the most efficient approach to problem solving is human nature – it is not surprising that students are using these tools to fast-track assignments, brainstorm ideas, get unstuck as they start writing, receive help solving problems, and otherwise experiment with ChatGPT as a learning tool. However, amidst the benefits ChatGPT can offer remains a fundamental concern regarding academic integrity. When the only thing standing between a student and their free time is a standard 5-paragraph essay on Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, and ChatGPT can handily generate a commendable draft in under a minute, writing the old-fashioned way from scratch seems like a hard pitch.

 

Students are outpacing instructors and administrator in usage

While institutional stakeholders debate next steps, students are flying up the adoption curve. Within just 100 days of ChatGPT’s launch, nearly one in three students reported being a regular user of generative AI tools – a rate of growth we have, quite literally, never seen before.

Tyton Partners Time for Class 2023: Generative AI Writing Tool Adoption Curve chart

An even greater number of students (48%) have tried AI writing tools at least once, whereas 71% of instructors and administrators have never used these tools, with 32% reporting that they are not even aware of these tools.

Tyton Partners Time for Class 2023: Familiarity With Generative AI Writing Tools graph

First-hand use changes beliefs about potential value of generative AI and the need for regulation

Instructors, administrators, or students who have experimented with generative AI tools are far more likely to recognize the tools’ potential value in education and advocate for policies and practices at the institution-level that enable “responsible use” of generative AI tools as part of teaching and learning.  Said differently, when educators or students create an account and experiment with generative AI tools firsthand, their perspective on the tool’s potential for positive learning outcomes changes.

Tyton Partners Time for Class 2023: Beliefs About Generative AI Writing Tools' Impact on Student Learning graph

The early adopter instructors that are regularly using these tools are opting to make instructional changes to their courses as they find ways to integrate AI into their teaching methods. Currently, many instructors report drawing the line at using the tools to generate text, whereas non-generative uses of these AI tools (e.g., brainstorming, editing, and outlining) are seen as more permissible.

Tyton Partners Time for Class 2023: Permitted Uses of Generative AI Writing Tools graph

Though these tools pose a threat to the integrity of conventional summative assessments, they also can serve as a catalyst for a pedagogical shift that emphasizes the student’s process rather than just the final product. Taking writing as an example, it’s increasingly vital for instructors to gain insight into students’ writing processes – including outlining, brainstorming, and revising – all steps that generative AI tools can support. Necessitated or not, refocusing on the writing process and the “how” has the potential to improve writing instruction, not destroy it.

When integrating generative AI into assignments, it should be approached with an intimate understanding of the technology’s limitations – asking “what am I attempting to assess with this assignment that is uniquely human?” is a helpful question for instructors to consider when adapting assignments. For example, one political science instructor told us they were having students interview local politicians, and then use ChatGPT to write an essay summarizing the politicians’ views, and if they were electable in the current political environment. In this example, the instructor is letting students outsource the actual writing process, and instead refocusing the students to both conduct a thoughtful interview, and read complex political subtext, both tasks that AI tools are not well suited for.

As some instructors adapt, 35% of non-user instructors indicate having made no changes to their courses in response to the release of new generative AI tools. While it is too early to recommend best practices, there is clearly a need to experiment, collaborate and make informed decisions about future policy and use of generative AI technology.

What you can do: Experiment and collaborate

A few institutions are assembling task forces, hosting webinars, and organizing information sessions to educate instructors and administrators about this technology. The head of one such task force shared, “we begin every meeting not with slides, but by pulling up ChatGPT on a screen and experimenting with it live. I watch jaws drop. Once they’ve seen the tool, the discussion is very different.”

  • We urge instructors and administrators who haven’t yet done so to try ChatGPT or similar tools, like Google Bard or Bing Chat. Sign up for a ChatGPT account. Ask it to write you an essay on your own thesis topic, or brainstorm answers to a key question in your course. Ask ChatGPT how you can integrate it into your class – it can be a guide! Find ways for it to assist you with your own work; early experimenters are lesson planning, creating custom activities, and outsourcing administrative tasks (e.g., make course websites SEO-friendly).
  • Current users can support their non-user peers by sharing their experimentation and learnings.
  • Outside of campus, education companies and service providers can explore ways to assist instructors in monitoring, regulating, and integrating AI, potentially offering resources, and facilitating conversations.

Looking ahead

At their core, generative AI tools like ChatGPT are just that: tools. They are incredibly powerful and can be harnessed by students and instructors to either improve education or to rob students of foundational skills. The path forward will require an iterative approach, but for higher education to make informed decisions about where and how to monitor or integrate, the 71% of instructors and administrators who have yet to try generative AI tools need to spend hands-on time with these tools. Outside of campus, education companies and service providers can explore ways to assist instructors in monitoring, regulating, and integrating AI, potentially offering resources, and facilitating conversations.

Only once all parties have a sufficiently deep understanding of generative AI tools will we be able to engage in thoughtful discourse and experimentation around the future of this technology in education.

As always, we welcome the opportunity to continue this discussion. Reach out to us if we can help your organization and its digital learning strategy.