Coaching from artificial intelligence chatbots, personalized and accessible at any time, is now shaping how some students write.
It can be helpful in getting your message across. But it also could backfire badly.
(TNS) — I’m a writing professor who sees artificial intelligence as more of an opportunity for students, rather than a threat. That sets me apart from some of my colleagues, who fear that AI is ...
Teachers spend up to 29 hours a week doing nonteaching tasks: writing emails, grading, finding classroom resources, and carrying out other administrative work. They also have high stress levels and ...
Imagine sitting down to write, staring at a blank page, and feeling the familiar pressure of crafting the perfect sentence. Now, picture an assistant by your side—one that can brainstorm ideas, refine ...
What if writing a book no longer required months of painstaking effort, late nights, and endless rewrites? Imagine crafting an entire manuscript—complete with polished prose, cohesive structure, and ...
An editor discusses reactions to using AI in journalism, noting positive reader feedback, criticism from peers, and support from those embracing AI.
“If I were a student today, the first thing I would do is learn AI,” Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, recently declared. What’s good advice for students is probably also good for entrepreneurs. While no ...
Productivity is being lost, because too many teams are drowning in AI slop, and endless “almost useful” drafts that look ...
The development process improves because it is informed by real outcomes. AI learns from what happened, and the team adjusts ...