Here’s a summary of the Chronicle of Higher Education opinion piece “I’m a Student. You Have No Idea How Much We’re Using ChatGPT” https://www.chronicle.com/article/im-a-student-you-have-no-idea-how-much-were-using-chatgpt
by Owen Kichizo Terry, published on May 12, 2023:
Key Points from the Article
Disconnect Between Educators and Students
Educators often assume AI-detection tools or the “distinctive” writing of AI will reveal student use of ChatGPT. However, many students describe that it’s surprisingly easy to do the lion’s share of the thinking using ChatGPT while still producing work that appears authentically theirs—rendering it difficult for professors or detection software to catch.
How Students Use ChatGPT Strategically
Rather than asking ChatGPT to write an entire essay, students more often employ it in step-by-step stages—generating a thesis statement, crafting an outline, writing paragraphs one by one, and then rewriting those themselves for better flow and personalization.
Anonymity and Confidence in the Process
The author expresses confidence in this method, contention that it is “simply impossible to catch students using this process.”
Broader Context: How Students and Institutions Are Navigating ChatGPT in 2025
Students’ Mixed Attitudes
Recent reports show students are ambivalent about AI use:
Many rely on AI to handle “busywork”—e.g., summarizing, streamlining—and free up time for more meaningful tasks or self‑care. Yet, they also worry about over-reliance impacting critical thinking or skill development.
In one study, three British students logged nearly 12,000 ChatGPT prompts over 18 months—using it for academic writing, mental health, career planning, and more. Remarkably, they faced minimal institutional scrutiny despite their heavy reliance.
Academic Integrity and Institutional Response
Widespread use of AI for coursework—with inconsistent detection tools and unclear policies—has educators alarmed. The trend even prompted one student to create a tool for AI-assisted cheating in job interviews.
A striking real-world example: In mid‑2025, a UCLA graduate publicly displayed ChatGPT‑generated assignments during their commencement speech—sparking public debate about academic integrity and AI norms.
Trends in Usage Over Time
After ChatGPT’s late 2022 launch, student adoption surged. Growth dipped briefly in spring 2023—coinciding with summer break—but rebounded by late 2023.
A 2024 survey of computing students found ChatGPT usage skyrocketed: in 2023, 34.1% had never used it as a help resource; by 2024, that fell to 6.3%, making it nearly as common as online search.
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