Yu and his colleagues in research have not interviewed any of the students and cannot say for sure that students use Chatgpt or any of his competitors, such as Claude or Gemini, to help them with their tasks. But improving writing students after the introduction of Chatgpt seems to be more than an accidental coincidence.
Large ups for international students
An unidentified university is an institution for minority service with a large number of Spanish -eating students who have been raised, speaking Spanish at home, and a large number of international students who are foreign speakers in English. And it was those students, whom the researchers classified as “disadvantaged language”, saw the largest ups in the quality of writing after the advent of Chatgpt. The students who went to a college with weak writing skills, an indicator that the university traces also saw huge profits in the quality of their writing after Chatgpt. Meanwhile, the stronger English speakers and those who have entered the college with a stronger writing abilities have seen less improvements in the quality of their writing. It is unclear whether they use Chatgpt less or whether the bot offers less dramatic improvement for a student who is already writing quite well.
The profits for “disadvantaged language” were so strong after the fall of 2023 that the gap in writing between these students and the stronger English speakers completely evaporated and sometimes turned. In other words, the quality of writing for students who do not speak English at home, and those who went to college with poor writing skills, was sometimes even stronger than that of students who were raised to speak English at home, and those who went to a college with stronger writing ability.
Profits concentrated among high -income students
These profits in the quality of writing among “disadvantaged language” were concentrated among higher -income students. The researchers were able to compare documents for writing students with administrative data for students, including their family income, and noticed that writing low -income students whose parents did not attend college did not improve so much. In contrast, writing high -income international students with educated parents is transformed significantly.
This is a sign that low -income students do not use Chatgpt as much or not as effective. Socio -economic differences in how students benefit from technology are not uncommon. Previous studies For example, the text processing software has found that higher -income students tend to be more easier to benefit from editing functions and see more writing benefits than the possibility of cutting and placing and moving text around.
Mark Warsawier is a professor of education at the University of California, Irvine and director of his Laboratory for Digital TrainingWhere he studies the use of technology in education. Warschauer did not participate in this survey and he said he suspected that higher income benefits would be fleeting, as low-income students became more aclimated and easier with AI over time. “We often see with new technologies that high -income people get access first, but then it balances. I believe that low -income people use mobile phones and social media as much as high -income people in the US,” he said.
But he predicts that the essential and more great improvements in writing for international students, far greater than for home students, will be “more important and durable”.
Of course, this improved writing quality does not mean that these international students are actually learning to write better, but it shows that they are able to use the technology to present ideas in well-written English.
The study researchers did not analyze the ideas, the quality of the analysis, or if the students had any sense. And it is unclear whether the students submitted the reading in the chatbot along with the professor’s question and simply copied and put the response to the chatbot in the discussion advice, or whether the students were actually read, introduced some preliminary ideas, and simply asked the chatbot to lie to their writing
In his own hours of the SWC at Teacher’s College, he said he encouraged students to use Chatgpt in their writing tasks as long as they admit it, and also to present transcripts of their conversations with AI chatbot. In practice, he said, only a few students admit to using it.
He noticed that writing students in his hours has been improving so far. “It was actually terrible this year,” he said. More and more of his students are presenting a typical AI production that “seems reasonable, but it doesn’t make much sense,” he said.
“Everything comes down to the motivation,” Yu said, “If they are not motivated to study, then students will use badly any technology.”
Contact the staff writer Jill Introduce In 212-678-3595, Jillbarshay.35 on a signal, or Barshay@hechingerreport.orgS