▲ | c0balt 4 days ago | |||||||
Present the results of your exercises (in person) in front of someone. Or really anything in person. A big downer on the online/remote Initiatives for learning but actually an advantage for older Unis that already have existing physical facilities for students. This does however also have some problems similar to code interviews . | ||||||||
▲ | rootusrootus 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
> Present the results of your exercises (in person) in front of someone I would not be surprised if we start to see a shift towards this. Interviews instead of written exams. It does not take long to figure out whether someone knows the material or not. Personally, I do not understand how students expect to succeed without learning the material these days. If anything, the prevalence of AI today only makes cheating easier in the very short term -- over the next couple years I think cheating will be harder than it ever was. I tried to leverage AI to push myself through a fairly straightforward Udacity course (in generative AI, no less), and all it did was make me feel incredibly stupid. I had to stop using it and redo the parts where I had gotten some help, so that my brain would actually learn something. But I'm Gen X, so maybe I'm too committed to old-school learning and younger people will somehow get super good at this stuff while also not having to do the hard parts. | ||||||||
▲ | NitpickLawyer 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
Sure but that's a solution to prevent students from using LLMs, not an example of something a professor can ask students that "LLMs can't do"... | ||||||||
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