Why All the Chatter About ChatGPT?
Professors say use of artificial intelligence in the classroom may reshape the way they teach
Posted in: College News and Announcements, School of Communication and Media News
Professors at ÌÇĐÄvlog â and throughout the world â are working to figure out the best ways to approach the new wave of artificial intelligence (AI) that is reshaping the ways students learn about writing. The tool, ChatGPT, is able to compose college essays, marriage proposals, business letters, song lyrics, computer code and â as an introductory class on news reporting and writing would find out â news stories. All created in response to short prompts.
âItâs such a new technology and Iâm still thinking it through in terms of how to handle it, how to introduce it, when to introduce it and what to teach them and what not to teach them,â says School of Communication and Media Associate Professor Tara George.
In a recent class, George decided to dive right in to better understand the chatter behind ChatGPT, inviting her students in her Introduction to Journalism course to use the bot to test how convincing it can be in writing a news story â in this case her Montclair students being featured on a recent , âChatGPT: How students are using and learning from artificial intelligence.â
âWe looked at it together just to see what it could do, and what the students noticed is that it does in seconds something that the students are building up to learning over the course of the semester,â George says.
Across campus, professors are wrestling with how to use artificial intelligence in their classrooms. There are concerns that ChatGPT threatens to normalize plagiarism â and in journalism, create fake news. Some professors are redesigning their assignments in response.

âThere are times when I look at it and just think, âOh my gosh, this whole thing makes me want to run off to the woods and forget about it altogether.â But we canât do that,â says Writing Studies Associate Professor Ronald Brooks Jr. âWeâre at the same spot that math teachers were in when having to deal with Excel spreadsheets, and if you go further back, with calculators. I think weâll figure it out.â
Last month, Brooks joined a Montclair discussion on ChatGPT and similar technologies that draw on artificial intelligence. The faculty panelists â with expertise in writing, computational linguistics and semantic parsing â offered their perspectives on the technology, including how ChatGPT might change teaching and learning. (Watch:Â ).
âWe have this technology now and so how do we respond to it? It will completely redefine how we teach writing, and for many of us, redefine how we teach,â Brooks says.
Brooks offered advice for professors wondering how to teach in the age of artificial intelligence. First, make the class accountable. âMake it really clear if you donât want students to use AI writing in your class,â he says. But, secondly, donât be afraid to introduce it. âThis technology will be available to them when they get out into the working world. So why not start with it and see where it takes you?â

In the class demonstration with Georgeâs journalism class, students discovered its limitations. It was difficult to get on to ChatGPT as the free software has been overwhelmed by users testing its ability. And while ChatGPT quickly generated readable prose (it works by referencing its vast repository of digital information, including training sets, books, Wikipedia articles and other online writing), the news story it turned out contained notable errors.
âIt was making up quotes from students who didnât exist,â says sophomore Avery Nixon, a Film and Television major with a Creative Writing minor. âIt was getting the facts wrong. If you didnât know it wasnât true, it would probably look okay. But it was a bunch of random things mixed together, and it wasnât factual at all.â
Jonathan Howell, an associate professor of Linguistics, tackled the issue of teaching students to use IA in a  as a Star-Ledger/nj.com guest columnist. âIt should come as no surprise that students have started to embrace ChatGPT,â he writes. âThey are, after all, digital natives. They have never known a world without algorithms. Algorithms that optimize web searches, curate social media feeds, filter rĂ©sumĂ©s, deny loans and health insurance claims, suggest the next word in your text message, and more. They accept algorithms as a necessary and pervasive, if somewhat creepy, part of ordinary life.â

Howell says he recalls the âextreme reactionsâ when the internet came along, âItâs interesting to see some of the same things play out with ChatGPT where you have some school districts and universities saying we have to ban this thing completely and figure out how to detect people who are using it.â
The ÌÇĐÄvlog Office for Faculty Excellence has hosted webinars and posted practical advice on its website, including assignment design. This includes referencing class materials and notes in written assignments, including visual prompts, connecting to current events, and replacing written assignments with ones that require students to submit an audio file, podcast, video, speech, drawing, diagram or multimedia project.
âMy one main piece of advice I would give to teachers is this: Make the assignment personal to the experience of the students because then theyâll actually want to do the writing or the assignment,â Brooks says. âMaybe thatâs a little too idealistic but at least that personal connection is something that the computer canât do.â
Story by Staff Writer Marilyn Joyce Lehren.
You May Also Like: