In just a few months, higher education has moved from being afraid of how generative AI like ChatGPT could help students cheat, to cautiously embracing it by allowing students to use it under certain circumstances.
In getting to grips with how AI will change education and society, we’ve heard mainly from educators, university management and other experts. But what about students, whose studies, careers, relationships and futures will be most impacted by AI?
We are academics from universities in Sydney and Hong Kong, specialising in higher education practice and research.
Over the last two months, we have asked students their thoughts about how AI should be used in their education through questionnaires and focus groups. This includes a survey of more than 450 students in Hong Kong and pilot focus group panels with 13 Australian students.
Here are some the key themes to emerge so far from this ongoing research.
AI makes knowledge easier to access
Students recognised that ChatGPT was helpful for summarising, brainstorming, explaining and suggesting. They mentioned how it made it easier to learn difficult topics in a conversational way.
As one told us:
I’ve had a mostly positive experience… Explanations of new concepts are always really well done and you [can] ask it to explain something a little more clearly.
Others mentioned it helps them learn during classes:
to grab quick definitions, explain concepts to me, and assist in discussions when the conversation goes quiet or people are confused.
Students are aware of the risks
The more experience students had with ChatGPT, the more nuanced their views were. One student noted ChatGPT “will miss out on important points or misunderstand”.
That’s why I am not relying on it for assignments, instead it is very helpful for my daily learning.
Another went further to say that using AI improved their critical thinking:
I simply put the whole assignment in to see what it would generate. The answer was quite abysmal… This was really valuable information because I developed critical thinking while critiquing its work.
Another student added, “I think students really need to understand that AI is not always correct”.
In the survey of more than 450 students across Hong Kong universities, 80 percent said they understood its limitations and potential inaccuracies.
AI is key to their future careers
Students talked about how AI could remove less desirable parts of work, to focus on more important thinking.
busywork can be done for us, and will be done for us in our future careers.
As one student put it:
for learning, it’s [like] an upgraded version of Google. Let’s say if you are new to a topic, you can ask ChatGPT questions and treat it as interactive Wikipedia.
Students said they wanted their teachers to teach them “how to best use AI tools and make AI tools a common part of education, just like PowerPoint and Excel”.
This includes educating them about risks, biases and limitations so they can understand the technology they will inevitably be using.
Students agreed guidelines about “what happens if AI is used” are needed going forward. As one noted:
Please do not assume the worst of us. Rather, teach us how to use this technology in the right way and learn alongside it.