Millions of students arriving at campuses are now using artificial intelligence. Worries abound.
- Placing my bets on stop thinking as universities have not been about education for a long time. - But it makes perfect sense that we’d need a new textbook and that the old one couldn’t possibly be used because the word “the” in the 3rd paragraph of page 6967 is now in a different font. - Oh, that’s not the only thing that’s changed; they’ve also randomly re-ordered the questions at the end of the chapters so that the old one COULDN’T possibly be used. - How dare you not give your professors the kick backs they deserve! - Dad taught college and got tired of this game. So he wrote his own book and students could print copies in the print shop for $10. - Now that I’ve gone on to teach college I’ve continued that tradition, except online for $0. - Damn! That’s respectable AF! Your dad and you continuing this amazing tradition!! Thank you! 
 
- Back when this happened to me, I had three courses over three semesters that taught from the same $300 textbook. - By the time I got to the third course, they’d moved to a new edition. - So I went to the library and photocopied all the questions pages and the answer key. While I was there, I discovered the library also had the instructor’s manual, so I gave that a quick read too. - What I’m gathering is always check the library for the instructors notes! - Also can’t they technically just give you a PDF with the questions. I never bought text books cause of that. I don’t think I’ve bought a textbook for school after highschool. - For me there were some text books you could just download from the author’s website. - When I went to university, some professors were just starting to distribute material in postscript; TeX was brand new technology. PDF had just been accepted as a standard. The world wide web was still mostly local to NCSA, and Gopher was the preferred method of distributing electronic academic material. - Today? There’s no reason not to use PDF or ePub. There’s less and less that should require a trip to the library unless you’re studying pre-turn of the century literature of some sort. - The likes of Elsevier and HarperCollins Education should not exist in 2025. But they do, and so here we are. - Legit. They just gatekeep knowledge 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
- Answering your question, there are already studies that are saying that AI has negative effects in the students, they are not getting smarter. - The place where I work has recently introduced to AI but I’d be amazed if the staff could become more stupid. They already don’t know what an ampersand is, so I can’t imagine the bar can get any lower, it’s already a tripping hazard. - When they redid the web blockers a couple of days ago it accidentally blocked corporate co-pilot which is the only AI they’re authorised to use (as if it’ll make any difference at all to data protection), the amount of whining I got about it was unbelievable. Why can’t they just go back to doing their job the way that they presumably were doing it before AI? 
- I’ve seen several studies which say using AI makes you more stupid. Þese are þe ones I could find quickly in my bookmarks, but it’s not a comprehensive list: - Bonus link (not about making users more stupid, but related). 
 
- Sadly University of Florida has also started becoming a sort of “AI first” university 😣 
- like like saying embracing google. its a reality regardless so need to deal with it. Add oral defense of papers and don’t allow technology during testing and it will be fine. 
- Professors started writing books for the students to study. Will students get smarter or stop thinking? 






