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Homework
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Saved by Chris Werry
on September 18, 2023 at 9:27:41 pm
Homework
Note: homework is typically due the night before class by 11.59 p.m.
Before the First Class (if possible)
- Read the syllabus and assignments. Note any questions you have and be prepared to share them in class.
- Share some information about yourself on this google slide
- Go to the Canvas Discussion Board and click on the "Introduce Yourself" thread. You will be prompted to say a bit about who you are, but also to talk about
your academic interests and potential topics you might want to explore in this class.
Week 1: Monday 08/21 (Done in class, but can start before if you wish)
- Join the course wiki. To do this, go to the front page of the course wiki. At the top right corner of the page click on the “Request Access” link.
You will soon receive an email inviting you to set up your wiki account (your username will be your email address). Follow the instructions, then try logging into the wiki.
- Share some information about yourself on this google slide
Week 1: Wednesday 08/23
- It is often said we are entering "the age of A.I." Share some initial thoughts, experiences, insights, hopes, or fears. What might this
mean for you, your field, your (future) profession, education, the world? What have your initial encounters with A.I. been like?
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Read the 4 short "possibilities" texts - Mollick, “How to Use AI to Do Stuff” and “Magic for English Majors,” Matthews, “If You’re Not Using ChatGPT for your Writing You’re Making a Mistake”; Chandra, “What’s a Word Worth in the A.I. Era?”
- “How to Use AI to Do Stuff” provides an overview of some common AI tools. Note any points you found useful or
interesting. Share a little about your experience so far with AI tools.
- Mollick, Matthews and (to a lesser extent) Chandra are optimistic about AI. Why? What reasons do they give? How persuasive
did you find them, and why? Which points resonated the most, and was there anything you would you like to know more about, extend, or challenge?
- Reply to two of your classmates' posts.
- Post to the Discussion board and make a copy in your Google Drive.
Week 2: Monday 08/28
- The short readings for today (Caplan, Kirschenbaum, Harari et al., Vincent and Chiang) present critical perspectives on AI.
What are their main claims and concerns? What points really stood out to you? How persuasive did you find their arguments, and why? Was there anything you would you like to know more about, add to, or challenge?
- Reply to two of your classmates' posts.
- Post to the Discussion board and make a copy in your Google Drive.
Week 3: Wednesday 09/06
- Read O’Neil's “These Women Warned of AI’s Dangers and Risks Long Before ChatGPT.”
- Many of the most prominent scholars and critics of both "algorithmic governance" and traditional A.I are women of color. O’Neil's
article introduces some of these scholars and gives an overview of their work. Write a response to this article. What issues, questions, or problems struck you as the most significant or interesting? What were your main "takeaways" from this test, and was there anything you would you like to know more about, extend, respond to, or challenge?
- Reply to two of your peers' posts. Post homework to the discussion board and to your Google Drive.
- Read these short, practical "how to" texts by Molllick, “Assigning AI: Seven Ways of Using AI in Class,”
“How to Use ChatGPT to Boost Your Writing” and “What happens When AI Reads a Book.” Note anything that seemed particularly useful to you, or any questions you have.
- If you are in the group doing the first round of presentations, continue preparing to lead discussion of
the three Mollick texts. Summarize the texts, describing the parts you think your classmates may find most useful, and say why. Test some of the things Mollick describes, and describe the results. For example, What happens When AI Reads a Book explains how to upload a text and analyze it in productive ways. Try doing this and share what you discovered.
Week 4: Monday 09/11
- Read Abril, “Gen Z graduates are fluent in AI and ready to join the workforce,” And Karp, “Our Oppenheimer Moment: The Creation of
A.I. Weapons." The "rhetoric of A.I" is important. The frames and narratives used to discuss it, the way it is represented, and the persuasive strategies employed to describe the stakes and who/how it should be developed matter. With this in mind, compose a rhetorical analysis of these two texts. Start by outlining the main claims, then discuss some persuasive strategies used, and note any critical questions you have.
- Reply to two of your peers' posts. Post homework to the discussion board and to your Google Drive.
- If you are in one of the groups doing the second round of presentations, continue preparing to lead discussion of your assigned texts.
Summarize the texts, describe the parts you think your classmates may find most useful, and say why. What issues do they raise? Why are important? Create some questions for the class to tackle, and lead the discussion.
Week 4: Wednesday 09/13
- Take time to absorb, reflect, and experiment with A.I. prompts/tools. Add entries to your A.I. reflection journal.
(From the syllabus: "The AI Reflection Journal is an informal account of your thoughts, reflections, and experiments with AI. How you do this is open. You may prefer to focus on personal, professional, or creative interests. You could write about experiences inside and outside class, ways you have used AI in your writing, resources you found, experiments, etc. Roughly every week make an entries in your journal and post it to your Google drive folder.)
You could experiment by asking for feedback on papers you've written in the past, or try generating material for assignment prompts you've received. You could use Mollick's advice, or look up "prompt engineering tips" and see if you can generate useful results. Or you could move in a more creative direction.
Don't worry if you haven't written anything in your journal up to this point. Start now, and keep adding to it as the semester progresses. But make sure you do work on this over the semester as if is worth 10% of your grade.
- Review the course schedule and do some initial brainstorming of topics you might be interested in writing about. You can of course
explore topics related to A.I. and writing/education, but you don't have to.
- Share whether you'd like to add more texts and work on A.I. in the coming months. If there is a lot of interest I could revise the
schedule to make this possible.
- Post to the Discussion board and make a copy in your Google Drive.
Week 5: Monday 09/18
- Read Thompson's Public Thinking. As you read, use the Hypothes.is annotation tool to select the text and add comments, questions,
connections, disagreements, etc. You can reply to the annotations others make. Don't spend much time on this - just "think out loud" as you read. Please select the smallest amount of text possible - just a word or phrase, so others can more easily add their comments.
- On the discussion board, post about the parts of the text that seemed most interesting to you. What connected most to your own
experiences? Discuss anything you had questions about, liked, disagreed with, or would like to investigate further.
- Thompson thinks digital media is powerful because it offers many new opportunities for us to write for audiences, and he believes this "audience effect" can make
us better thinkers and writers. Have you ever experienced the "audience effect"? Are there forms of public thinking you might be interested in exploring, or audiences you might want to write for, no matter how small?
- How might the emerging age of AI connect to or complicate Thompson's argument? Will A.I. expand, reconfigure, or undermine
the kind of writing and thinking Thompson argues is so valuable?
- Reply to two of your peers' posts. Post homework to the discussion board and to your Google Drive.
Week 5: Wednesday 09/20
- Young and Sullivan, “Why Write” A Reconsideration” and Morrison's "Meta-Writing: AI and Writing argue we should rethink the purpose, value
and effects of writing. What are their main claims, and how do they invite us, in different ways, to "rethink" writing? Discuss what you found most interesting, provocative or useful about each text. If one of the texts raised an issue you might like to explore further, share this.
- Reply to two of your peers' posts. Post homework to the discussion board and to your Google Drive.
Week 6: Monday 09/25
- Read Werry "Imagined Electronic Community" and Doctorow, “Facebook’s Secret War on Switching Costs”. This Werry fellow will
join us for class. Write a response to his article (be as critical as you like). List questions for him to answer.
- What connections do you see between Werry and Doctorow? Discuss what you found most interesting, provocative or useful
about each text. If one of the texts raised an issue you might like to explore further, share this.
- Reply to two of your peers' posts. Post homework to the discussion board and to your Google Drive.
Week 7: Monday 10/02
- Read Caplan et al, Algorithmic Accountability: A Primer, Nicoletti and Bass, “Humans Are Biased: Generative AI Is Even Worse”, Vogell,
“How a Secret Algorithm Pushes Rents Higher”; Ross and Herman, “Denied by AI”
- Compose a reading response that addresses the authors' claims about a) how and why algorithmic bias operates, b) what some effects are, and
c) what can we do about this? What did you find most interesting, provocative or useful about these texts? If one of the texts raised an issue you would like to know more about, share this.
- Reply to two of your peers' posts. Post homework to the discussion board and to your Google Drive.
Week 8: Monday 10/09
- Read Winner, “The Politics of the Artefact.” This is rather complex text. Use an A.I tool to help identify Winner's main claims, his purpose,
the influence of this text, and its reception. How did the A.I. do? Was it useful?
- What parts of Winner's argument seem most interesting or relevant to you? Can you think of examples that illustrate Winner’s argument?
For example, can you see Winner’s claims applying in any way to our current digital environment?
- Read Pariser and Allen, "Our Democracy Needs Digital Public Infrastructure" (OR watch this video, Pariser's, "Social Media Platforms
and the Social Good." What were your main takeaways? Do we need digital public infrastructure, and do you agree with Pariser and Allen's vision of this?
- Reply to two of your peers' posts. Post homework to the discussion board and to your Google Drive.
Week 08: Wednesday 10/11
- Tufecki's "It's the (Democracy-Poisoning) Golden Age of Free Speech" Hassan's, “Subscribe to PewDiePie” and, "YouTube the Great Radicalizer"
suggest social media has reconfigured free speech, and changed the way extremism propagates, and this is a problem. What are their main claims, and what did you think of them? Discuss the way one of these texts works to persuade readers.
- Reply to two of your peers' posts. Post homework to the discussion board and to your Google Drive.
Week 11: Monday 10/30
- Read the one page handout on key elements of demagoguery, the two page handout on possible causes of a "culture of demagoguery,"
and Roberts-Miller, "Rhetorical Characteristics of Demagoguery." Read Wallace, Inaugural Speech,. The texts claim demagoguery has distinct rhetorical characteristics - what are they, and how do they work? Try to think of examples you have encountered of texts or speakers that exhibit some of these rhetorical characteristics.
- What did you think of possible causes of a "culture of demagoguery? Did it seem useful or accurate, and are there any parts you
think could be challenged or factors that should be added?
- Use the Roberts Miller handouts as a lens to analyze this text by Wallace. Discuss two rhetorical characteristics of demagoguery
you identified in the text, and their (potential) persuasive effects.
- Reply to two of your peers' posts. Post homework to the discussion board and to your Google Drive.
Homework
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