Latin American universities embrace ChatGPT despite cheating fears

A girl works on her laptop inside of her house in front of the refinery of Puerto Ventanas in Ventanas, Chile September 1, 2018

A girl works on her laptop inside of her house in front of the refinery of Puerto Ventanas in Ventanas, Chile September 1, 2018. REUTERS/Rodrigo Garrido

What’s the context?

Latin American universities are welcoming AI chatbot ChatGPT as a way to boost teaching and learning despite fears of plagiarism

  • ChaptGPT widely used in Latin American universities
  • Universities reluctant to regulate generative AI
  • ChaptGPT seen as way to transform education

BOGOTA/MEXICO CITY/RIO DE JANEIRO - When Chilean university professor Diego Martínez asked his 50 students if they had used ChatGPT to help with an engineering assignment, he was surprised to find that every one of them had.

The popular AI chatbot can generate coherent prose, including essays, stories, summaries, legal text, and even poetry about virtually any subject in response to users' questions and is designed to mimic a human conversation.

"We just have to realize that there is a new student in the room that is helping everyone," said Martínez, associate professor of industrial engineering at Chile's Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaiso (PUCV).

"Students use it for everything, to brainstorm, to synthesize information to improve grammar," said Martínez.

From Chile and Colombia, university teachers and students are using OpenAI's chatbot on a regular basis as a research assistant, writer, editor, and even code programmer, which they say can boost learning and reduce teacher workload.

In Mexico, Rafael Mendoza, a computer science professor at the Autonomous University of Mexico State, was also caught off guard by ChatGPT's boom.

"My students caught me by surprise. They got to AI before me, and I became suspicious as they suddenly started delivering perfect assignments, with no grammatical errors and perfectly structured," said Mendoza.

A woman checks her mobile phone inside the premises of the Supreme Court in New Delhi, India, September 28, 2018
Go DeeperAre AI chatbots in courts putting justice at risk?
Macci Ex Machina clown portrait generated by machine learning AI. Edinburgh 2022 . Perry Jonsson & AI/Handout via Thomson Reuters Foundation
Go DeeperAs AI-generated art booms - who really owns it?
An illustration of a mobile phone showing a chat between a user and an AI chatbot
Go DeeperThe (AI) therapist is in: Can chatbots boost mental health?

At Brazil's University of Brasília, art student Maicon Costa has been using ChatGPT for months for research and to stave off his writer's block.

"When it started, professors were terrified of it, but now they're trying to get us to learn how to use it," Costa said.

Critics have warned the tool could lead to greater misinformation, cheating and plagiarism and called for stricter regulation of generative AI.

Martinez noted that while ChatGPT can help improve teaching and learning students need to approach it with a critical mind, while teachers should be left to decide if they want to introduce their own guidelines on it is use.

"ChatGPT is a very good tool but it's also good at lying, making mistakes, which are called hallucinations, and you have to be an expert to catch them," said Martinez.

"And I don't think the students are there yet," he said.

Cheating

Universities in Latin America are debating the benefits and pitfalls of AI in higher education and society.

In March Brazil's biggest state-run university, USP, hosted a seminar on ChatGPT, as have other institutions in the region.

In Mexico, universities like the Monterrey Institute of Technology have shared recommendations with teachers and students on the ethical use of chatbots, such as attributing text written by AI and double-checking the sources it provides.

"It's not a matter of right and wrong. We need students to be responsible when using AI," said Edward Bermúdez, who is co-drafting AI guidelines for the Ibero-American University in Mexico City.

"They must think deeply about the ethical use of technology, not to be punished for using it."

The main challenge facing universities is how to ensure ChatGPT's already ubiquitous use does not lead to more cheating.

Some academics have warned their students grades will be cancelled if they are caught using ChatGPT, while others have changed the way they are assessing students, including fewer take-home assessments and more hand-written essays and exams in class and oral exams.

"I'm going to try not to set essays outside of class because this immediately invites the use of ChatGPT," said philosophy professor Andrés Páez at Colombia's Los Andes University.

One colleague, he said, is showing students examples of essays generated by ChatGPT and asking them to improve on it.

Some professors, particularly in law, economics and business schools, are teaching students to effectively use the tool, ask it better questions, and to be critical.

Last month a U.S. judge imposed sanctions on two New York lawyers who submitted a legal brief that included six fictitious case citations generated by ChatGPT.

Teachers say their students are concerned that generative AI tools will make some professions obsolete, such as entry-level coders, paralegals and data analysts, leading some to question the value of a degree.

Design professor Bermúdez has planned lessons on the ethical and technical use of generative art AI like Midjourney and DALL-E, which generate artistic images in a matter of minutes.

"I teach students that their job is beyond technical; it requires critical thinking skills. They aren't competing with AI, but using it to reach new potentials," said Bermúdez.

To ban or not to ban

Plagiarism concerns have led some institutions like Sciences Po, one of France's top universities, to ban its use in January, as did India's Bengaluru-based RV University.

In the United States and Australia, some high schools have banned the use of ChatGPT to prevent cheating.

In Latin America, however, most universities have so far taken a hands-off approach and few have introduced university-wide ChatGPT guidelines and restricted its use.

In Colombia, Páez said there is no official university policy on ChatGPT nor are there any plans to ban it.

"I think the consensus is that ... prohibition doesn't get us anywhere," said Páez, who is also a researcher at Los Andes Artificial Intelligence Research and Training Center.

"As there is no way of proving its use, other options need to be found," he said.

Many universities are leaving it up to teaching staff to decide how best to incorporate ChatGPT into their lessons and monitor its use.

"Universities can and should allow the use of ChatGPT for students, teachers and researchers ... it should be taught how it can be used responsibly and honestly," said Patricia Avila, who heads The Union of Latin American and Caribbean Universities (UDUAL).

This week the Russell Group of 24 leading British universities including Oxford and Cambridge issued guidelines on the use of generative AI.

According to the guidelines, universities should support its "ethical and responsible use" and "ensure academic rigour and integrity is upheld."

Engineering professor Martínez, a self-described "heavy user" of ChatGPT said the tool is a "major opportunity in education that needs to be taken cautiously."

"We are using it, people are using it in their jobs. But we also need to be critical and experiment with it in our classrooms and develop our own guidelines," he said.

(Reporting by Anastasia Moloney in Bogota;, Diana Baptista in Mexico City and Fabio Teixeira in Rio de Janeiro. Editing by Zoe Tabary.)


Context is powered by the Thomson Reuters Foundation Newsroom.

Our Standards: Thomson Reuters Trust Principles


Tags

  • Education
  • Social media
  • Data rights

Featured Podcast

An illustration photo shows the globe with a tree standing on top. On the left hand side, a red backed illustration shows barren trees and oil refinery towers. On the right hand side, a green backed illustration shows wind turbines and solar panels. A sound equaliser image crosses the screen to indicates audio.
6 EPISODES
Podcast

Just Transition

The human stories behind the shift to a green economy

An illustration photo shows the globe with a tree standing on top. On the left hand side, a red backed illustration shows barren trees and oil refinery towers. On the right hand side, a green backed illustration shows wind turbines and solar panels. A sound equaliser image crosses the screen to indicates audio.
Podcast




Get our data & surveillance newsletter. Free. Every week.

By providing your email, you agree to our Privacy Policy.


Latest on Context