AI writing (ChatGPT, etc.) is supposed to be transformative and all, the Washington Post tells me.
The New York Times worries about jobs; no worries, says the Washington Post, since AI requires "chat whisperers" to get the best from the software. CNET tried publishing articles written using it, but oops--too many mistakes.
AI can also spark creativity, apparently, although the examples most outlets choose to illustrate the creative problem-solving sound like obvious solutions. It's more of a springboard to creativity than a solution to writing, as scifi magazines have found out since they were flooded with AI-written stories and had to stop submissions for a while.
But what can the writing part of AI do well as of this writing?
1. Perfect C essays, all correct grammar, platitudes, puffery, and no substance.
2. Mission statements, ditto.
There are surely nuances I'm missing, but everything I've seen so far either when testing it myself or when reading about it has been pretty much on the spectrum from 1 to 2.
It will get better, but ChatGPT--which, yes, is in its infancy--is so far like a bar trick--you know, where someone puts a quarter inside a bottle or something by magic means, or folds a dollar bill in a certain way to win a bet. I can't be more specific because I mostly only see this on Better Call Saul, but you know what I mean.
There's been a lot of hand-wringing about how this might affect the classroom: one IHE writer calls it a "plague on education" while others suggest creative uses for it. Some
instructors have started using it to get students to question their
assignments and test its limits.
I'm kind of eager to see how this might work in the classroom next year. What about you?
Edited to add: Here's the first paragraph of what it wrote when I asked it to write like me. Like looking in a mirror, don't you think? This blog is all about the peppy self-help pitch, am I right?
Write a blog post in the style of notofgeneralinterest.blogspot.com
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2 comments:
I used ChatGPT for ideas when writing a choose your own adventure type story as part of a teaching tool for one of my classes. Given a problem, setting, and character, it was able to provide suggestions for problems that could happen, or how the main character might find help. It was good at giving a list of potential names for a supernatural social gathering. The suggestions were all very good and I’d use it again for that purpose.
I wouldn’t ask it to do any factual work, because it will do the work like a stereotypical mediocre cis white man (both confident and wrong). But for minor plot ideas in a not too important story, it was great.
Anonymath—that sounds like a fantastic use of ChatGPT—extending imaginative possibilities. I will try this—thanks! It has great possibilities.
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