A small but growing number of educators are experimenting with oral exams to circumvent the temptations presented by powerful ...
As the use of artificial intelligence continues to grow, testing students' knowledge and preventing cheating on exams could see a resurgence of just plain talking. Kyle Maclean, an assistant professor ...
In a recent survey of college students, a staggering 85 percent confessed to using AI in their studies.
As AI tools like ChatGPT spread across campuses, colleges are rethinking exams with oral tests, handwritten work, and ...
As ChatGPT, Google Bard, and other AI tools are available to the average internet user, academic conversations are common on how faculty and students will accommodate these technologies within the ...
You are a student and enter a room or Zoom meeting. A panel of examiners who have read your essay or viewed your performance, are waiting inside. You answer a series of questions as they probe your ...
Oral exams are making a comeback, and I’m mostly here for it. A few weeks ago, we had a faculty professional development day on campus. One of the sessions was devoted to faculty greatest hits, ...
Victoria L. Dolan ’28, a Crimson Editorial Editor, lives in Kirkland House. Artificial intelligence is changing education. If Harvard wants to keep its students honest, our exams need to change too.
Taking and passing the knowledge exam to get a driver's license can be stressful for anybody, but maybe even more so for those whose native tongue is not English. To eliminate the language barrier, ...