Teaching this Fall (TBA): Writing, Rhetoric, and AI

The two big things on my mind right now are finishing this semester (I am well into the major grading portion of the term in all three of my classes) and preparing for the CCCCs road trip that will begin next week. I’m sure I’ll write more on the CCCCs/road trip after I’m back.

But this morning, I thought I’d write a post about a course I’m hoping to teach this fall, “Writing, Rhetoric, and AI.” I’ve set up that page on my site with a brief description of the course– at least as I’m imagining it now. “Topics in” courses like this always begin with just a sketch of a plan, but given the twists and turns and speed of developments in AI, I’ve learned not to commit to a plan too early.

For example: the first time I tried to teach anything about AI was in a course I taught in fall 2022 in a 300-level digital writing course. I came up with an AI assignment based in part on an online presentation by Christine Photinos and Julie Wihelm for the 2023 Computers and Writing Conference, and also on Paul Fyfe’s article “How to Cheat on Your Final Paper: Assigning AI for Student Writing.” My plan at the beginning of that semester was to have students use the same AI tools these writers were talking about, which was OpenAI’s GPT-2. By the time we were starting to work on the AI writing assignment for that class, ChatGPT was released. So plans changed, English teachers started freaking out, etc.

Anyway, the first thing that needs to happen is the class needs to “make”– that is, get enough students to justify it running at all. But right now, I’m cautiously optimistic that it is going to happen. The course will be on Canvas and behind a firewall, but my plan for now is to eventually post assignments and readings lists and the like here. Once I figure out what we’re going to do.

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