The company also suggests that students show their work and drafts, including conversations with AI models, to demonstrate they are not simply relying on the AI for answers. OpenAI acknowledges that while AI agents like ChatGPT will likely become a regular part of education, there is potential for misuse. However, they believe that students and teachers will adapt if they embrace these tools and make them their own.
Key takeaways:
- OpenAI is proposing ways for teachers to use its AI agent, ChatGPT, in classrooms despite concerns about misuse and plagiarism.
- ChatGPT can be used to help language learners translate and write correctly, formulate new test questions, and role-play as a job interviewer.
- Teachers are advised to teach students to critically evaluate the answers given by ChatGPT and not trust them blindly.
- OpenAI admits that AI detectors are not reliable in distinguishing between AI-generated and human-generated content, and recommends having students show their work and drafts, including conversations with AI models.