logo
Schools need more time to decide on AI's future in academia

Schools need more time to decide on AI's future in academia

Feel strongly about these letters, or any other aspects of the news? Share your views by emailing us your Letter to the Editor at
[email protected] or filling in
this Google form . Submissions should not exceed 400 words, and must include your full name and address, plus a phone number for verification
Advertisement
As a university student, I am caught in the crossfire over
artificial intelligence (AI). Almost every day, I can go from a class taught by a professor who is against AI use to another taught by a lecturer who, when asked whether ChatGPT can be used, invariably says, 'Go for it'. Their perspectives have given me food for thought on AI's role in higher education.
Universities have the right to prohibit AI in science-related courses or any courses involving theoretical knowledge. Having studied linguistics, I have experienced the problems of using AI first-hand.
AI does not appear well-suited to help students write about language acquisition theory or speech mechanisms in phonetics. These theories involve concepts and specialised terminology which must be explained in-depth. I've found that popular chatbots are unable to include direct quotes from research papers to support arguments, while often quoting from non-academic sources or even fabricating quotes.
Regardless, many university students may learn foreign languages more efficiently with the help of AI. I've heard French teachers speak of the shock students experience when learning a new language – the initial loss of ability to articulate their ideas.
Advertisement
Acquiring a language often relies on students' knowledge of their native or second languages. While exposure to texts in a foreign language is vital, looking up a multitude of unfamiliar words in a dictionary can be tedious. Chatbots can help students by providing what seems like authentic French-English translation, for example. Synonyms can also be found in seconds with the help of AI.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

AI can enhance learning rather than threaten it
AI can enhance learning rather than threaten it

South China Morning Post

time8 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

AI can enhance learning rather than threaten it

Writer Ernest Hemingway is believed to have said that the first draft of anything is bad. The first step to writing is often being brave enough to write badly. But in today's world of generative artificial intelligence (AI), the manuscript often writes itself without fear or reluctance. Advertisement With the advent of generative AI tools, such as ChatGPT and DeepSeek , academia stands at a historic crossroads. The way we read, write and think is changing in major ways, from junior to graduate school and beyond. The debate is not about whether AI should be employed at school, but how to ensure that its usage is moral and helpful. Generative AI can produce essays, exam answers and research abstracts and paper reviews with astonishing fluency and skill. A few prompts are all it takes. This has triggered widespread concern about plagiarism diminished originality and the erosion of critical thinking Many teachers and educators are concerned that students are relying on AI, submitting work they didn't complete and 'learning' things they didn't truly grasp. Rather than just speeding things up, AI is changing how we learn. It challenges us to rethink the purpose of education. However, acting out of fear doesn't allow us to see whole picture. Schools and universities around the world are reacting to AI in different ways. Some places are completely banning generative AI, while others are letting it be used with supervision. But outright bans are not a good long-term solution. Advertisement Students today are digital natives. Many already use AI tools to draft assignments and essays, brainstorm research topics, translate texts from foreign languages or summarise academic articles.

How young Chinese are turning to AI to tell their fortune amid fear of the future
How young Chinese are turning to AI to tell their fortune amid fear of the future

South China Morning Post

timea day ago

  • South China Morning Post

How young Chinese are turning to AI to tell their fortune amid fear of the future

Tarot enthusiast Haicen Yang used to look to her cards for guidance. These days, the 21-year-old from Chongqing, in southwestern China, is tapping into a new energy source for her readings: generative artificial intelligence. Yang says that by combining the ancient Chinese concept of ba zi – how a person's birth year, month, day and hour can influence their fate – with astrology apps and AI-powered chatbots such as ChatGPT and DeepSeek, she is able to glimpse into the future. This extends to looking into her own future: she recently asked ChatGPT to check on her compatibility with her boyfriend based on their ba zi. 'I input our birth dates, gender and birthplaces into an astrology app, got our ba zi, then imported the results to ChatGPT with the prompt: 'Assume you are a feng shui master; please use our ba zi to assess our relationship,'' Yang says. A screenshot from DeepSeek illustrates how the Chinese generative AI platform responds to prompts about fortune-telling. Photo: Nancy Wang's DeepSeek chatbot Traditional Chinese philosophy uses five elements – wood, fire, earth, metal and water – to describe the relationship between things in the universe.

Meet the Chinese start-up behind Google's Android XR-powered augmented reality glasses
Meet the Chinese start-up behind Google's Android XR-powered augmented reality glasses

South China Morning Post

time3 days ago

  • South China Morning Post

Meet the Chinese start-up behind Google's Android XR-powered augmented reality glasses

Xreal, the Chinese augmented reality start-up behind Google's first Android XR-powered augmented reality (AR) glasses, is gearing up for the mass-market release of its lightweight eyewear as early as the first quarter of 2026, its co-founder said. Code-named Project Aura, the product was first announced at Google's annual I/O developer conference in May. Rivalling offerings from Apple and Meta Platforms, Google adopted a strategy from its smartphone playbook: providing the operating system – Android XR – while collaborating with hardware makers. Project Aura is Google's second XR initiative, following Moohan, a collaboration with Samsung Electronics on a virtual reality headset similar to Apple's Vision Pro. Aura's field of view (FoV) – the visible area seen through the glasses – exceeds 70 degrees, 'the largest screen we have ever made', according to a statement from Xreal at the Augmented World Expo in June. The device will be powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon chipset alongside Xreal's own XR-optimised X1S chip. Wu Kejian, Xreal's co-founder, chief scientist and head of algorithms. Photo: Handout 'This achievement is thanks to Xreal's extensive experience in optical engineering, enabling thinner lenses with broader fields of view,' Wu Kejian, the company's co-founder, chief scientist and head of algorithms, said in an interview with the South China Morning Post.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store