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1.1: Introduction

  • Page ID
    346950
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    AI is a complex subject that raises many, sometimes contradictory emotions. There are possibilities and perils; we live in interesting times. You have probably been hearing about ways students might use AI systems like ChatGPT. Maybe you are more informed than your teachers, or maybe you haven’t chosen to focus on it much yet.

    This guide introduces some basics about AI that are worth keeping in mind if you are considering using it as a college student. There are activities to build AI literacy and stimulate further reflection. As an “orientation,” this document is an invitation to engage with AI with both curiosity and skepticism. It gives some context for discussions with yourself and with your peers and teachers about AI, discussions that will surely be ongoing as AI continues to change and attitudes toward it in education and society evolve.

    Where I’m coming from: My name is Anna Mills, and I have taught college writing since 2005 and have written a textbook, How Arguments Work: A Guide to Writing and Analyzing Texts in College. Since June 2022, I've focused on the role of AI in writing instruction; I give workshops, sit on task forces, post on social media, and publish about the subject of AI in higher education. Still, I definitely don't feel I have all the answers. I hope that teachers and students can collaborate to reflect and try and modify our practices around AI in a continuous process of open deliberation about the ethics of AI and how AI may help or hinder learning. You can read more about this approach in the paper I coauthored with Maha Bali and Lance Eaton, “How do we respond to generative AI in education? Open educational practices give us a framework for an ongoing process.”

    I wrote this text with input from many educators who kindly responded to the draft I posted on Google Docs. A grant from the California Community Colleges Chancellor’s Office Zero Textbook Cost Program via Cañada College funds this work in from Summer 2024 through Summer 2025 under the guidance of Sarah Harmon.


    This page titled 1.1: Introduction is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Anna Mills (ASCCC Open Educational Resources Initiative) .

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