Generative Artificial Intelligence in Higher Education: Evidence from an
Analysis of Institutional Policies and Guidelines
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2402.01659v1
- Date: Fri, 12 Jan 2024 14:58:13 GMT
- Title: Generative Artificial Intelligence in Higher Education: Evidence from an
Analysis of Institutional Policies and Guidelines
- Authors: Nora McDonald, Aditya Johri, Areej Ali, Aayushi Hingle
- Abstract summary: ChatGPT in November 2022 prompted a massive uptake of generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) across higher education institutions (HEIs)
In the year since the release, HEIs have increasingly provided policies and guidelines to direct GenAI.
This paper examined documents produced by 116 US universities categorized as high research activity or R1 institutions to understand GenAI related advice and guidance given to institutional stakeholders.
- Score: 4.438312734352056
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: The release of ChatGPT in November 2022 prompted a massive uptake of
generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) across higher education institutions
(HEIs). HEIs scrambled to respond to its use, especially by students, looking
first to regulate it and then arguing for its productive integration within
teaching and learning. In the year since the release, HEIs have increasingly
provided policies and guidelines to direct GenAI. In this paper we examined
documents produced by 116 US universities categorized as high research activity
or R1 institutions to comprehensively understand GenAI related advice and
guidance given to institutional stakeholders. Through an extensive analysis, we
found the majority of universities (N=73, 63%) encourage the use of GenAI and
many provide detailed guidance for its use in the classroom (N=48, 41%). More
than half of all institutions provided sample syllabi (N=65, 56%) and half
(N=58, 50%) provided sample GenAI curriculum and activities that would help
instructors integrate and leverage GenAI in their classroom. Notably, most
guidance for activities focused on writing, whereas code and STEM-related
activities were mentioned half the time and vaguely even when they were (N=58,
50%). Finally, more than one half of institutions talked about the ethics of
GenAI on a range of topics broadly, including Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
(DEI) (N=60, 52%). Overall, based on our findings we caution that guidance for
faculty can become burdensome as extensive revision of pedagogical approaches
is often recommended in the policies.
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