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Artificial intelligence in education and academic integrity: an undergraduate argumentative essay in the United States

Generative artificial intelligence (GAI) fundamentally reshapes the undergraduate learning environment by challenging traditional paradigms of academic integrity and student assessment. This synthesis explores the delicate balance between utilizing AI as a pedagogical tool and mitigating risks to original critical inquiry through calibrated human oversight.

Teesi

While generative AI presents risks to traditional academic integrity, it acts as a transformative catalyst for undergraduate education when integrated with human-AI collaborative frameworks and calibrated trust.

Keskeiset argumentit

  • 1.AI shifts the perception of writing from a purely independent task to a collaborative human-AI process.
  • 2.Over-reliance on GAI tools threatens the development of foundational critical thinking skills if not carefully scaffolded.
  • 3.Academic institutions must transition from punitive policies to pedagogical strategies that prioritize AI literacy and active oversight.

What carries into the full paper

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Academic writing sample

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Analysis

The Evolution of Trust in AI

Evidence suggests students initially perceive GAI as a 'cheating tool,' yet this view evolves post-engagement toward a collaborative resource [4]. By applying a human-AI collaboration framework, institutions can transition from punitive measures to fostering AI literacy [8]. The takeaway is that oversight remains critical, as AI output requires human verification to ensure academic rigor [4].

Method

Methodological Approach

This essay adopts a qualitative synthesis approach, evaluating current literature on generative AI integration in higher education [3][8]. The criteria for analysis focus on student perception shifts, pedagogical frameworks for AI use, and the efficacy of collaborative writing models. Limitations include the rapid evolution of LLM capabilities and institutional policy variance [4].

Asiakirjan esikatselu

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Essee

Degree:
Artificial intelligence in education and academic integrity: an undergraduate argumentative essay in the United States

Author:

Group

First M. Last

Advisor:

Dr. First Last

City, 2026

Contents

Introduction6
Conceptual Framework: AI and Academic Writing9
Analysis12
Conclusion15

Johdanto

The rapid proliferation of generative artificial intelligence (GAI) has introduced unprecedented challenges to academic integrity within United States undergraduate institutions [3].

Traditional methods of assessment are currently being tested by the ability of large language models to generate human-like responses to complex queries [3].

This essay examines the intersection of GAI and academic standards, seeking to define how educators can leverage these tools constructively [8].

By utilizing a qualitative analysis of recent educational studies, this work evaluates the changing perceptions of students toward AI-assisted writing [4].

Key objectives include identifying the shift from viewing AI as a tool for fraud to its potential as a collaborative resource [4].

The following chapters will address the pedagogical frameworks necessary to maintain academic excellence in an era of automation [8].

Ultimately, this analysis argues that integration, rather than exclusion, is the most viable path for modern academic integrity [8].

Through this, we propose a shift in how institutions define and enforce ethical writing standards in the digital age [3].

References

  1. Textual imitations and artificial intelligence : a prospective essay on academic fraud (2024)
    Ludovic Jeanne
    DOI-linkki
  2. WIP: Generative Artificial Intelligence in Undergraduate Software Engineering Education (2025)
    Jeffrey Hemmes, Richard Blumenthal
    DOI-linkki
  3. Future of education in the era of generative artificial intelligence: Consensus among Chinese scholars on applications of ChatGPT in schools (2023)
    Ming Liu, Yiling Ren, Lucy Michael Nyagoga et al.
    DOI-linkki
  4. Student Perceptions of ChatGPT Use in a College Essay Assignment: Implications for Learning, Grading, and Trust in Artificial Intelligence (2024)
    Chad C. Tossell, Nathan L. Tenhundfeld, Ali Momen et al.
  5. Academic Integrity and Artificial Intelligence (2024)
    Ceceilia Parnther
  6. (Academic) Integrity in the Age of Artificial Intelligence (2026)
    Ke Yu
  7. Artificial Intelligence and Academic Integrity at a Crossroads (2026)
    Ben Kei Daniel, Lynnaire Sheridan, Nathalie Wierdak
  8. Advancing Students’ Academic Excellence in Distance Education: Exploring the Potential of Generative AI Integration to Improve Academic Writing Skills (2024)
    Kgabo Bridget Maphoto, Kershnee Sevnarayan, Ntshimane Elphas Mohale et al.

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Essee

SFS 5989 (Finnish Citation)

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  • 500–1 500 sanaa
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Essee

SFS 5989 (Finnish Citation)