Technology
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This certainly sucks hard. A possible path forward could be to simply discontinue papers. Only grade verbal exams and written exams started and completed in class. Open book, but prohibit usage of non-vetted electronic devices
In uni we always had a verbal defense for our papers. That had 2 benefits: (1) verify that the student actually wrote the paper (plagiarism and ghost writers were a thing before LLMs too), and (2) the prof could test the boundaries of the student's understanding with additional questioning.
The obvious caveat being the amount of time it takes for the teacher to have a 1-on-1 with each student.
This is pretty much the only way to verify knowledge. And it's kind of what interviewers do when they're thinking about hiring someone for a job, right? Same goal.
One potential avenue that schools have, especially in college, is to let the students know that. You're not up against the school; you're up against the interviewer.
This academic year I'm going to try to set up a thing where we do mock interviews with students, hopefully with real interviewers from real companies. I want to show the students where they're going, and what they really have to get ready for.
In my dream world, we wouldn't even have grades or diplomas. After all, when we're learning things on our own we don't have those and yet somehow we manage to get the job done. But not having grades comes with its own set of problems in this academic structure we've set up.
I agree, the assignments will need to adapt to discourage the use of LLMs. Easiest is in-class writing or written exams. Unfortunately that takes away from other class activities.
I remember one of my favourite courses in university had exams where you could bring in any resource you wanted (excluding phones), because the exam was written in a way that required understanding of the core topic, something you can't simply look up.
A quote from one of my favorite profs, "You can bring your books, you can bring your notes, you can bring a friend; if you don't know the material, you will fail."
I'm not sure why schools are allowing unfettered access to the internet on school devices.