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How AI is undermining learning and teaching in universities | Letter

about 20 hours ago
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In discussing generative artificial intelligence (‘It’s going to be a life skill’: educators discuss the impact of AI on university education, 13 September) you appear to underestimate the challenges that large language model (LLM) tools such as ChatGPT present to higher education.The argument that mastering AI is a life skill that students need in preparation for the labour market is unconvincing.Our experience is that generative AI undermines teaching and learning, bypasses reflection and criticality, and deflects students from reading original material.Student misuse of generative AI is widespread.Claims that AI helps preparation or research is simply cover for students taking shortcuts that do not develop their learning skills.

Assessments are widely channelled through ChatGPT, disregarding universities’ usually feeble guidance and rules.Generative AI results in generic, dull and often factually incorrect output.For example, we asked students to interpret a short article by Henry Ford from 1922.Many answers suggested that the autocratic and racist Ford was developing a “sophisticated HR performance management function for his business” and that he was a “transformational leader”.In many degree programmes, LLMs have little to no practical value.

Their use sabotages and degrades students’ learning and undermines critical analysis and creativity,If we are to make better sense of the impact of AI on work, education and everyday life, we need to be more sceptical and less celebratory,Prof Leo McCannProf Simon SweeneyUniversity of York Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section,
businessSee all
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Jaguar Land Rover extends production shutdown after cyber-attack

Jaguar Land Rover has extended its shutdown on car production, as Britain’s biggest carmaker grapples with the aftermath of a cyber-attack.JLR said on Tuesday it would freeze production until at least next Wednesday, 24 September, as it continues its investigations into the hack, which first emerged earlier this month.The manufacturer said: “We have taken this decision as our forensic investigation of the cyber incident continues, and as we consider the different stages of the controlled restart of our global operations, which will take time.“We are very sorry for the continued disruption this incident is causing and we will continue to update as the investigation progresses.”JLR, which is owned by India’s Tata group, stopped production at its sites after discovering hackers had infiltrated its systems a few weeks ago

about 18 hours ago
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‘Our plans could be derailed’: family firms say Labour tax rises will force fire sales

Unassuming wooden crates filled with brake pads and metal springs are piled high in the loading bay of the Broadbent factory close to Huddersfield city centre. Shipping them out to Nigeria and Ghana remains the day job for Simon Broadbent, but the manufacturer’s owner has a growing issue nagging at him – the fate of his 160-year-old business in the face of Labour’s tax overhaul.Broadbent has emerged as a reluctant challenger to plans by the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, to strip family firms of the ability to pass on their businesses tax free from next April. Campaigners, including the manufacturers association Make UK, say the tax overhaul threatens the backbone of the British industrial sector.Under the current system, business property relief allows families to pass on assets free of inheritance tax (IHT)

about 20 hours ago
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State pension on course for inflation-busting 4.7% rise under triple lock; JLR production shutdown extended again – as it happened

UK pensioners can look forward to a 4.7% increase in their state pensions next year, if the government sticks with the triple-lock.This morning’s labour market data shows that average wage growth (including bonuses) was 4.7% between May to July.That is the figure used in the triple lock formula which dictates that the state pension will increase in line with average wages, inflation or 2

about 22 hours ago
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Sky puts 900 roles at risk in shake-up to compete with US streaming services

Sky has put 900 roles at risk as the broadcaster continues to reshape its business in the streaming era.The company, which employs about 23,000 staff in the UK, expects the consultation process to result in about 600 roles being cut, with 300 redeployed.The latest round of cuts – the third in a little over 18 months – follows a series of product launches including the second iteration of the Sky Glass smart TV and budget-friendly Sky Glass Air.The Comcast-owned broadcaster is focused on improving existing services, and the cuts will hit Sky’s technology and product teams and related corporate functions.Sky has cut almost 3,500 roles since the beginning of last year as the broadcaster looks to move away from traditional satellite pay-TV to streaming-based services in the fight against US giants such as Netflix

about 22 hours ago
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How an engineering student turned red Solo cups into stylish sweaters: ‘A lot of trial and error’

Lauren Choi wanted to give plastic a second life. Her experiment turned into The New Norm, a sustainable textile startupIf you’ve been on a college campus in the last 30 years, you’ve likely come across red party cups. Made by brands like Solo and Hefty, the iconic cups are beloved by frats, crucial to drinking games like beer pong – and very difficult to recycle because of the type of plastic they’re made from.But Lauren Choi, an engineering student at Johns Hopkins University, saw an opportunity: she wanted to turn these problematic cups into fabric. In 2019, during her senior year, she led a team that built an extruder machine that could spin plastic waste into textile filaments

about 23 hours ago
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UK pay growth stays high – but Britons are feeling the pinch

Tuesday’s latest snapshot of the UK jobs market shows what is becoming a familiar pattern: a gradual slowdown in hiring, rising unemployment, yet with wage growth still uncomfortably high for policymakers.Whether because of Rachel Reeves’s £25bn national insurance increase, uncertainty over her upcoming budget, AI-related disruption or Donald Trump’s tariffs – or perhaps all four – companies seem to be cautious about taking on staff.In the July to August period, the number of vacancies in the economy was down by 119,000 on a year earlier.The unemployment data only runs to July – but it shows 2.3 unemployed people for each vacancy, up from 2

1 day ago
cultureSee all
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My cultural awakening: a Bastille show helped me get over my crippling Covid-era anxiety

4 days ago
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The Guide #208: How theatre is holding its own in the age of artificial intelligence

4 days ago
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From Spinal Tap II to Ed Sheeran : your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

4 days ago
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Seth Meyers on Charlie Kirk shooting: ‘Political violence is abhorrent to the highest ideals of this country’

5 days ago
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Shrinking audiences, a cash crisis and rivals on the rise: what’s gone wrong at Tate?

5 days ago
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Protesters target Royal Opera House over performance by ‘Putin’s diva’

6 days ago