When Lily Kim didn't have enough time to reach out to her chemistry professor for help on a homework question, she turned to the latest artificial intelligence tool.
Kim, a sophomore at the University of Minnesota studying neuroscience, decided to type the assignment's question into ChatGPT in search of an answer.
"It didn't always give me the correct answer, but it at least navigated me to the correct path," Kim said.
Since last year's launch of ChatGPT — a free tool that lets people enter prompts and receive human-like text in return — colleges and universities are scrambling to navigate a new technology that is already changing learning environments.
While some Minnesota academics are concerned about students using ChatGPT to cheat, others are trying to figure out the best way to teach and use the tool in the classroom.
"The tricky thing about this is that you've got this single tool that can be used very much unethically in an educational setting," said Darin Ulness, a chemistry professor at Concordia College in Moorhead. "But at the same time, it can be such a valuable tool that we can't not use it."
Ethical concerns
When ChatGPT launched in November, Katherine Scheil, a University of Minnesota English professor and chair of the Faculty Senate Committee on Educational Policy, said some instructors worried it was "going to be the end of the world, and we've all lost our jobs."