Five ways to use Social Annotation with and against ChatGPT
Social annotation is an excellent way to make the reading, thinking, and writing processes of academic work more tangible and accessible to both students themselves and their instructors. As such, it can be a great way to both work against the potential abuses of AI chatbots and to engage with the written products of large language models like ChatGPT.
Here are five examples of using social annotation within the context of the rise of AI writing bots like ChatGPT.
1. Writing throughout a course rather than just at the end
Furthermore, when teachers engage with student thinking and writing throughout a course, instead of only at the end, they can provide more frequent guidance in the process and get to know their students more individually.
2. Writing in context, writing in community
Annotation is writing in very deep and specific contexts within broader texts: specific passages, specific phrases, specific words, even specific letters. Such specificity makes it less easily hackable for ChatGPT. Interestingly, one of ChatGPT’s shortcomings is its inability to integrate quotations effectively, and
That social context of collaborative annotation also makes it difficult for AI writing bots to reproduce.
3. Students annotating their own writing
Part of the problem that ChatGPT presents in education is in how teachers assess student work, though these challenges were not created by generative AI. A
When students are asked to annotate their own writing, especially an essay that is the final product of multiple drafts and multiple sources of feedback (instructor and/or peer), they take ownership of their own writing processes.
4. Students writing with AI writing tools
As others have argued, rather than banning ChatGPT or working to avoid or detect its usage, instructors should consider deliberately leveraging its affordances. Just like other tools used in the classroom, from spell check to calculators, there is obvious potential for abuse, but also a great potential benefit. I
Perhaps ChatGPT can be used as a writing tool, to help further the processes of thinking and writing rather than somehow replacing them.
5. Annotating the writing of AI chatbots
Annotation can be used to fact-check, comment on, and
We are likely to see AI become more and more a part of everyday life, not only in education but in a range of professional workplaces. Helping students to understand how ChatGPT works, both its benefits and its limitations, and training them to work with AI tools, to train AI tools, will be a service to them both academically and professionally. For example, teaching students to write effective prompts for generative AI to respond to could be a very valuable lesson in AI-era education. In fact, if we look at the rubrics for effective prompts, they’re not too far off from the expectations of a conventional writing assignment: concision, clarity, detail, and evidence.
We would love to hear more about how you think Hypothesis can be used with or in place of tools like ChatGPT. If you have specific assignment ideas, please submit them to our new Resource collection.
To read our statement on generative AI in education visit our previous post How Hypothesis is Responding to ChatGPT.
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