this post was submitted on 12 Nov 2023
18 points (95.0% liked)

Professors

226 readers
1 users here now

Attribution statement: I have stolen this text from the Professors subreddit with the hopes of providing an alternate community on Lemmy for us.

This community is BY professors FOR professors. Whether you are tenured, tenure-stream, a lecturer, adjunct faculty, or grad TA, if you are instructional faculty or work with college students in a similar capacity, this forum is for you to talk with colleagues. This community is not for students. While students may lurk and occasionally comment, they should identify themselves as students, and comments are subject to removal at mods’ discretion.

SYLLABUS

This community is a place for professors to BS with each other, share professional concerns, get advice and encouragement, vent (oh yes, especially that), and share memes. It has erstwhile been described as “kind of a 'teacher's lounge' for college professors.” This community is not for non-professors to ask questions of professors or about The Life™; it is for professors to ask each other questions.

As such, we ask all posters to abide by the following rules:

  1. No student posts/comments: This is a place for those teaching at the college level to discuss and share. While some student posts or comments may sneak by, and Mods may allow a richly upvoted post or comment that has spawned useful discussion to remain, that is the exception, NOT the rule.

  2. Don't Be Inappropriate: No weird sexual fantasy stuff, no confessions of crushes, no questions about dating or anything of that nature. Any posts of this type will most likely to be removed without question, explanation, or hesitation.

  3. No Incivility: No personal attacks, racism, or any other diatribes against students, or each other, that cross the line of civility. For that matter, attacks IN GENERAL are not tolerated. Disagree, challenge, vent, express frustration, but don’t cross that line. Attacks, hostility, or inappropriate conduct/content of any kind may result in a ban (temporary or permanent) at the Mods’ discretion.

  4. No "How do I become a professor?": Go to the website of the school you want to teach at. Look at the job listings. If the position you want is available, look at the qualifications. If you don't have those qualifications, get them. Apply for the job. That's it.

  5. No Spam/Surveys: No spam, no external surveys. We are not here to be marketed to; we're a bunch of academics who are here to goof off, vent, get advice, and share stories from the podium. Using the poll function in a post is, however, acceptable to let users weigh in on how they feel about an issue. For IRB approved surveys, you can message the Mods with a pitch and we will consider allowing it.

  6. No Bigotry: Racism, bigotry, sexism, or homophobia, or any other similar despicable type behavior will get your comment(s)/post(s) removed and you muted or banned. We will try not to penalize politically challenging speech (we mods are only human, after all), but it is essential that it be delivered thoughtfully and with circumspection. Low-effort sloganeering and hashtag-mentality posting will be removed; offensive content will result in a mute or ban. You will not always agree with the mods’ decisions in this regard, but it is the price we pay to have this little corner of cyberspace to ourselves.

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
 

I know that we're all still feeling our way around this issue, but how are other profs handling it? What is good evidence of unauthorized AI use? How do you handle a student who refuses to engage in attempts to get their side of the story?

For my classes, we talk once a month or so about acceptable use (treat it like a not-very-bright friend who's overconfident and prone to hallucinations). It's okay to brainstorm, bounce ideas, and generally use AI to spark creative problem solving. It's not okay to have it do your assignments.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] CaptObvious 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

For reference, my working practice this semester is to treat unauthorized AI use (we discuss what is authorized repeatedly) as an academic integrity violation. I'll begin an inquiry if at least two different AI detectors indicate that a majority of a submission was AI generated (either ≥50% of sentences or ≥50% probability that the entire paper was written by AI). So far guilty students have either immediately confessed or tried a variety of stalling tactics. One had me emailing with the AI for week, offering one excuse after another until the F was recorded and we moved on. Another relayed Helicopter Parent's instruction that I was to be lenient in grading and to stop talking with Student; that didn't go as they expected. Here at the end of the semester, others have simply ignored multiple emails, seemingly trying to run out the clock (hey, it works in sportsball).

I'll give a fair chance to explain, and there have been cases where those explanations passed muster. I'm completely happy to base a judgement on preponderance of evidence. But they have to actually offer some evidence, and neither my patience, time, nor the semester is infinite.