Category: Human-AI Collaboration
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Our Epistemic Boundaries between Learning and Assessment in a Postplagiarism Era
Bibek Dahal reflects on the postplagiarism speaker series led by Dr. Soroush Sabbaghan at the University of Calgary, focusing on the challenges of adapting learning and assessment practices in the era of generative AI. Key themes include the need for visible learning processes and prioritizing integrity, belonging, and human judgment over mere artifact-based assessments.
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New Open Access Chapter: “Pedagogical Ethics: Navigating Learning in a Generative AI-Augmented Environment in a Post-Plagiarism Era”
The chapter “Pedagogical Ethics: Navigating Learning in a Generative AI-Augmented Environment in a Post-Plagiarism Era,” co-authored by Sarah Elaine Eaton and Mohammad Keyhani, discusses the implications of generative AI in education, focusing on academic integrity and pedagogical ethics. It emphasizes learner agency and offers guidance for educators, available as open access.
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Teaching Fact-Checking Through Deliberate Errors: An Essential AI Literacy Skill
This teaching resource presents a method for enhancing AI literacy by engaging students in fact-checking AI-generated content with intentional inaccuracies. It emphasizes systematic verification processes, critical evaluation of sources, and understanding AI error patterns, equipping students with essential skills to discern accurate information in a postplagiarism landscape.
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Plagiarism (Re)Defined: Why Attribution Matters More Than Ever in a Postplagiarism World
The concept of plagiarism lacks a universal definition, being culturally and contextually influenced. It encompasses various types of work, including text, ideas, and designs. With a postplagiarism focus, we shift from punishment to fostering proper attribution practices, especially in light of AI’s impact on creativity. Institutions must clearly define and educate about plagiarism policies.
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Understanding Postplagiarism: Ethics in the Digital Age
Postplagiarism is defined as a new era where advanced technologies, such as AI and brain-computer interfaces, change intellectual engagement. It emphasizes the importance of attribution and accountability, contrary to absolute relativism or merely relying on technology. Critical thinking and digital literacy are crucial in teaching ethical interactions with these tools.
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Redefining Plagiarism in the Age of AI
The online presentation “Redefining Plagiarism” discussed the evolving concept of plagiarism in light of technological advancements, particularly Generative AI. As AI blurs the lines of originality and intellectual ownership, definitions of plagiarism must adapt. It emphasizes the need for quality-focused evaluation and maintains the importance of human accountability in creative work.


