![]() ![]() ![]() You may as well cite a “personal conversation” with a random guy who says he’s read a lot of texts but doesn’t distinguish between them and has no independent knowledge of the subject and no responsibility for being accurate or consistent. ![]() This hamfisted move by IB has prompted another layer to the debate: ![]() ChatGPT allowed in International Baccalaureate essays While the prospect of ChatGPT-based cheating has alarmed teachers and the academic profession, Matt Glanville, the IB’s head of assessment principles and practice, said the chatbot should be embraced as “an extraordinary opportunity”. The IB, which offers an alternative qualification to A-levels and Highers, said students could use the chatbot but must be clear when they were quoting its responses.ĬhatGPT has become a sensation since its public release in November, with its ability to produce plausible responses to text prompts, including requests to write essays. Schoolchildren are allowed to quote from content created by ChatGPT in their essays, the International Baccalaureate has said. The responses to AI writing in the form of ChatGPT have run the gamut from thoughtful to frantic (see both in my own consideration), but the International Baccalaureate response has added a new battle in the citation gauntlet for students and teachers: ![]()
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