Hi Jonathan,
What a great question that no doubt many in higher ed and social work have been struggling with for the past year, or more :-)
Here is the statement I include in certain courses, such as my Law & Ethics course for graduate students.
Artificial Intelligence Policy (or ChatGPT Disclosure Agreement): The use of AI writing tools to assist you in the writing process is allowed as long as you explicitly label, cite, or disclose the extent to which you use ChatGPT or any other AI assistant. All text written by AI must be quoted with the source model in parenthesis (OpenAI, 2023), and a reference citation included in the reference page. At the end of your paper, you should include a disclosure statement on the use of AI. Something like: "This paper used (did not use) AI for the following components of the writing process:" and then choose one or all of the following – None, Brainstorming, Editing, or Sentence Generation. Failure to adequately disclose the use of AI in your academic products may result in a grade deduction.
Example: OpenAI. (2023). ChatGPT (March 14 version) [Large language model].
https://chat.openai.com/chatinks to an external site.
Parenthetical citation: (OpenAI, 2023)
Narrative citation: OpenAI (2023)
I usually have a conversation the first day of class and then again as we discuss the major writing assignment for the semester.
Looking forward to what others share.
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Jimmy Young
Associate Professor
California State University, San Marcos
San Marcos CA
+1 (760) 750-8540
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Original Message:
Sent: Aug 09, 2024 17:50
From: Jonathan Singer
Subject: AI statement for syllabi
Dear all,
This is my first post in the Tech Spark, prompted by today's email from Rachel Schwartz and Melissa Earle.
I was wondering if you would be willing to post any statement you include on your syllabi about Artificial Intelligence. I'll start. I'm at Loyola University Chicago. Our SSW syllabi include the following boilerplate language:
Under Academic Integrity and Plagiarism:
"Plagiarism includes the use of generative AI tools (e.g., ChatGPT, Bing, etc.). Use of generative AI tools in your academic work is prohibited unless explicitly allowed by your professor. Artificial intelligence tools that provide spelling or grammar assistance (e.g., Grammarly) are not prohibited. "
I'm curious what everyone else is including.
Best,
Jonathan
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Jonathan Singer Ph.D., LCSW
Professor
Loyola University Chicago
Chicago IL
512-585-4226
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