Bringing GenAI into the university classroom

By Laura.Duckett, 13 February, 2025
How to use GenAI to improve teaching, rethink assessment and equip students for an AI-driven workplace
Bringing GenAI into the university classroom
How to use GenAI to improve teaching, rethink assessment and equip students for an AI-driven workplace
Students in a lecture hall

AI presents opportunities and challenges for higher education teaching and learning. While the impact of GenAI tools such as ChatGPT on academic integrity and critical engagement is of concern, these large language models have the capacity to streamline administrative tasks, spark creativity, enhance assessment methods and guide deeper learning, if used effectively. And with GenAI soon to become ubiquitous in most workplaces, it is vital students understand how to use it well. Building AI literacy, rethinking assignments and exploring how AI intersects with established pedagogical approaches should, therefore, be priorities for university educators. This collection offers practical insights into leveraging AI as a teaching tool that supports greater understanding and critical thinking, helping both students and their lecturers.

AI as a teaching assistant
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By Eliza.Compton, 11 September, 2024
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Artificial intelligence can have practical applications for assessment in higher education, despite the focus on the threats it poses. Here are considerations when using AI to support teaching and generate feedback
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4minutes
By Eliza.Compton, 19 July, 2024
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Generative artificial intelligence can trigger a certain amount of angst, but AI’s potential to support student learning should be explored, write Steve Hill and Quintus Stierstorfer
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4minutes

There are very real fears that students might use GenAI as a shortcut, preventing them from engaging critically with learning material. However, by encouraging students to work with AI as an assistant and embedding it into learning activities and assignments, AI outputs can be used to help students evaluate arguments, spot biases and refine their reasoning skills, as these resources explain.

Using AI to promote critical thinking
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By Laura.Duckett, 14 January, 2025
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Is ChatGPT destroying critical thinking, or is it allowing us to reconsider how we teach it? This resource explores some ways to empower literature students to use it to deepen their understanding
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4minutes
By Eliza.Compton, 27 June, 2023
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Designing assessment that tests critical thinking has value and practicality, so the challenge is figuring out questions that flummox the AI without creating wildly difficult problems for students, write Luke Zaphir and Jason M. Lodge
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4minutes

With AI sparking such a monumental transformation, not just in teaching and learning but in the careers that await students after university, AI literacy has become a must-have graduate skill. To close the digital divide, university lecturers need to consider the AI know-how students already have and the skills they will need. Then, as these resources explain, guide them to get the most out of these powerful tools, with a clear understanding of AI’s strengths and limitations. 

By Eliza.Compton, 20 November, 2024
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To capitalise on GenAI’s strengths, and understand its limitations, students need to develop their research and critical thinking skills in practical, embedded and subject-specific ways
By kiera.obrien, 8 October, 2024
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Updating Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein for the AI era helped students to understand the opportunities and limitations of the tool, in an engaging way. Here’s how to use performance as pedagogy
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5minutes
How to build AI literacy
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By Laura.Duckett, 13 December, 2024
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How can we encourage staff and students to use generative AI in ways that do not threaten an institution’s ethics or academic integrity? Read the University of Exeter’s take
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4minutes
By kiera.obrien, 2 January, 2025
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Is higher education prepared for a future defined by AI, or do we need to do more to align education with technology’s changing landscape? Here are three ways to get your students to engage with it critically
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5minutes

One of the best-documented concerns related to AI and higher education relates to academic integrity and plagiarism. The availability of GenAI means rethinking assessment and, some argue, reframing definitions of academic integrity. Traditional models such as essays are being swapped out for assessments designed around reflection, and real-time, practical tasks such as presentations. As the resources here explain, the focus must move towards examining students’ process rather than their final output. 

How to assess students in the AI age
Resources
By kiera.obrien, 9 December, 2024
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In the age of AI, has long-form writing in higher education reached a dead end? Martin Compton and Claire Gordon discuss the unique aspects of the essay and introduce a manifesto to revitalise it
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6minutes
By Eliza.Compton, 8 November, 2024
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University educators have an opportunity to rethink their approach to assessment, so that artificial intelligence tools support student learning without compromising academic integrity
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4minutes
By Eliza.Compton, 25 June, 2024
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How can educators make learning and human intelligence visible in the age of GenAI? Abby Osborne and Christopher Bonfield outline a model to rethink assessment and reward non-AI knowledge and understanding
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4minutes
Embed AI in assignment design
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By Eliza.Compton, 12 July, 2024
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Students may see handwriting essays in class as a needlessly time-consuming approach to assignments, but I want them to learn how to engage with arguments, develop their own views and convey them effectively, writes James Stacey Taylor
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4minutes

How can instructors align AI use with traditional models of teaching? These resources look at educational philosophies including behaviourism, constructivism and critical consciousness, along with how AI intersects with Bloom’s Taxonomy. Academics share specific exercises that use AI to strengthen learning and engagement

AI as pedagogy
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By kiera.obrien, 6 August, 2024
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Artificial intelligence can shape our educational practices – but when we allow this to happen unthinkingly, what do we risk losing? Here’s how to stay uncomfortable and ask the critical questions
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4minutes
By Eliza.Compton, 19 April, 2024
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When using large language models to create learning tasks, educators should be careful with their prompts if the LLM relies on Bloom’s taxonomy as a supporting dataset. Luke Zaphir and Dale Hansen break down the issues
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4minutes

Much of the work of teaching happens outside the classroom – emails, marking, feedback, class planning, course design – the list goes on. So while many academics are wary of AI, a growing number are using it to lighten their workloads by outsourcing some of the administrative tasks associated with university teaching. Read here about how AI can speed up marking, help deliver feedback, draft emails and summarise course materials, leaving instructors time to focus on more meaningful learning and assessment design.

By Laura.Duckett, 9 January, 2025
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How teachers can use AI to respond to student enquiries, provide feedback and create engaging learning content
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4minutes
How to use AI to streamline your work
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By Laura.Duckett, 23 December, 2024
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Teaching students whose first language is not English to write concise abstracts helps them develop their academic writing skills, but providing feedback on them can often be laborious. Here is how you can use ChatGPT to speed up the process
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4minutes
By Eliza.Compton, 13 January, 2025
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Artificial intelligence has the potential to improve speed, consistency and detail in feedback for educators grading students’ assignments, writes Rohim Mohammed. Here he lists the pros and cons based on his experience
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5minutes
By Eliza.Compton, 6 September, 2024
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How useful is artificial intelligence for syllabus design? A law lecturer compared the free and subscription versions of three generative AI platforms, with surprising results
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4minutes
Career focused AI
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