AI Ate My Homework

The Case of the Missing Detective: When AI Skips to the End

16 min · 22 de ago de 2025
Portada del episodio The Case of the Missing Detective: When AI Skips to the End

Descripción

Dr. Andrea Olinger, Director of Composition, and instructor Cecilia Durbin walk us through a multi-part "detective story" research assignment sequence. These assignments, designed to slow students down and think critically, emphasize process over product. Listen as we discuss how the AI tool mimics student voice, (sometimes) cites real world sources, and even exceeds some of the expectations for these assignments. What is lost when students use an AI tool to skip past the messy process of thinking, writing, and learning?

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de AI Ate My Homework!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

7 episodios

episode We were skeptical too: Social Work faculty on making AI work without losing your voice artwork

We were skeptical too: Social Work faculty on making AI work without losing your voice

Dr. Shawnise Miller, Dr. Emi Ramirez, and Dr. Jennifer Bobo from the Raymond A. Kent School of Social Work and Family Science share how they moved from initial AI apprehension to intentional, practical classroom use. They offer concrete examples, including Blackboard's built-in AI for rubrics, ChatGPT for instructional support, and their own AI teaching assistant, "Smarty Bird." This candid conversation highlights both benefits and limitations of these tools in the classroom. Rather than centering AI as a solution, the conversation reframes it as a teaching assistant that helps guide students back to faculty judgment, feedback, and expertise. What does it mean to stay current with technology without losing what makes teaching human?

4 de feb de 202625 min
episode The Vanilla Cupcake Problem: Personal Branding and AI in Education with Dr. Karen Freberg artwork

The Vanilla Cupcake Problem: Personal Branding and AI in Education with Dr. Karen Freberg

In our third episode of "AI Ate My Homework," strategic communications professor Dr. Karen Freberg shares valuable insights on AI's role in education through her personal branding assignment. Using a memorable "vanilla cupcake" metaphor, she explains how AI creates technically competent but ultimately soulless content lacking the authentic reflection that makes student work meaningful. Listen as we discuss how to leverage AI as a tool rather than a replacement for human creativity—teaching students to use AI-generated images to visualize their personal brand while critically reflecting on its accuracy. As industry increasingly expects AI literacy, Dr. Freberg advocates for teaching prompt engineering as a crucial skill and encourages faculty to experiment alongside students rather than fear these new technologies.

1 de abr de 202522 min