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Bette A. Ludwig, PhD 🌱's avatar

I worked in higher ed for nearly 20 years, advising students and teaching at a large public university, before leaving a few years ago.

I can promise you: educators are not ready for what’s coming.

AI is going to force a complete shift in how we teach. Even writing a dissertation could soon take little effort or energy. That alone raises big questions.

But what concerns me most isn’t the speed or ease, it’s the accuracy.

When students rely on AI tools to generate citations, they’re often pulling from questionable sources. Paywalled, peer-reviewed research is frequently bypassed in favor of blogs or secondary references with no original data. I’ve seen citations to personal websites or unsourced claims that look legitimate unless you double check.

The problem? Most people won’t double check. Many never have.

If that becomes the norm, we’re looking at a future filled with research papers and articles based on weak or worse, false information.

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Howard Aldrich's avatar

Fantastic post, Steve! This is precisely the information that everybody teaching undergraduate university level needs to know. Students are using search tools without thinking through the responsibility to vet what the program shows them. You are reminding us that skill is incredibly valuable and has to be taught if we are to get any value from our assignments.

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