Skip to content

ABC Tool

  • Home
  • About / Contect
    • PRIVACY POLICY
To teach in the time of ChatGPT is to know pain

To teach in the time of ChatGPT is to know pain

Posted on April 13, 2026 By safdargal12 No Comments on To teach in the time of ChatGPT is to know pain
Blog

What’s the point of building formative assessments into a course if they’re just handed off to an LLM? Suddenly, it’s a waste of time for both the student and the instructor. Small quizzes are excellent study tools to help students check their own understanding―if a student does them. Now, you can direct an “agentic” LLM browser to complete all the quizzes in an entire course with a single, frictionless prompt.

Should instructors preserve these sorts of assignments for students who want to benefit from them and accept the cheating, or should they eliminate the learning opportunity just to prevent cheating?

Evolution, the natural selection

Many instructors are trying to adapt to this crisis by going back to the only evaluation tools that are pretty much LLM-proof—tests like oral exams or handwritten work created under supervision in the classroom.

None of these solutions are available to instructors of asynchronous online classes. That sucks, since the availability of those classes is important. They can serve students with physical disabilities, students in rural areas far from a campus, or students trying to obtain a degree while working full-time jobs or caring for dependents. If we have to simply give up on the idea of online classes, those are the casualties.

But even for in-person classes, adaptations to prevent LLM cheating are often concessions that reduce pedagogical quality. For example, labor-intensive oral exams didn’t become an endangered species just because of the swelling student-to-instructor ratio. Pen and paper (or keyboard and mouse) exams make it easier for each student’s experience to be the same and remove some of the potential for bias in scoring.

Writing assignments that may previously have been excellent teaching tools have obviously become the first things to end up on the chopping block. I used to have students in a natural disasters class write a plot for a big-budget Hollywood disaster movie, using both accurate and implausible physical processes. It was good practice for their writing skills; the students found it enjoyable, and it forced them to skillfully apply a lot of what they had learned.



Source link

Post Views: 21

Post navigation

❮ Previous Post: The largest orbital compute cluster is open for business
Next Post: 10 Best tools for blocking unauthorized USB devices ❯

You may also like

Google Cast could be coming soon to the iPhone
Blog
Google Cast could be coming soon to the iPhone
May 25, 2026
Evan Blass retires @evleaks
Blog
Evan Blass retires @evleaks
May 5, 2026
Fun, swiveling design with some big flaws
Blog
Fun, swiveling design with some big flaws
May 30, 2026
Galaxy Watch 9, Ultra 2, and Galaxy A27 inch closer to release
Blog
Galaxy Watch 9, Ultra 2, and Galaxy A27 inch closer to release
June 5, 2026

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • Google Photos works to make it easier to copy and paste images
  • Toy Story 5’s Character VFX Are Next-Level Thanks to Tech Advances. And No, It’s Not AI
  • iPhone 18 Pro Max's aluminum frame leaks in three colors
  • GameHub’s ‘biggest update’ yet adds big Steam and EA upgrades
  • Evergoods Civic Access Pouch Review: This One Bag Meets My Tech Accessories Storage Needs for Travel

Recent Comments

  1. Last Chance for Big Savings on TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 Tickets – Artiverse on 5 days left: Save up to $410 on Disrupt 2026 passes

Archives

  • June 2026
  • May 2026
  • April 2026

Categories

  • Blog

Copyright © 2026 ABC Tool.

Theme: Oceanly News by ScriptsTown