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Ben Highton's avatar

Thanks for a very thoughtful piece and a pithy take away: "We don’t teach TikTok—we shouldn’t teach ChatGPT, either."

What confounds me is how a professor like me (and many others) who teaches at a large, public, state university with undergraduate classes that are typically no smaller than 100 students (with some but not a lot of TA help) can feasibly implement the no-AI, all deep thinking and fundamentals, approach (with reasonable assessment to assign grades).

Would love to hear your (or anyone else who reads this) thoughts what this could look like in practice for a professor at an R1 research university operating under the constraints of large class sizes, insufficient TA resources, and other expectations (i.e., publishing for continued advancement).

Tyler Ransom's avatar

I’ve sort of done this same pivot in my PhD econometrics course. This year, I “flipped” the course by having students learn the theory by watching videos and taking quizzes (discouraging LLM assistance but unable to outright ban) and then every day spending class time doing the things I want them to master: how to practically apply the theory via coding tools. Then, I assign them an ambitious project (that has much higher standards compared to pre-LLM iterations of the course) where they are encouraged to use AI.

So far I think it’s working well. Or at least as well as I had hoped. The kids are still using AI to help with the quizzes which is disappointing but I just give them a 0 if there is any hint of LLM assistance.

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