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How CU Boulder professors, staff are using AI

How CU Boulder professors, staff are using AI

University of Colorado Boulder Professor Michael Klymkowsky created two AI bots to help students learn: Dewey and Rita.

In his classroom at CU Boulder, Dewey and Rita can act like tutors, analyze answers and even provide feedback on how Klymkowsky can improve how he teaches material.

“It seems likely that (AI) policing schemes are ultimately going to be futile,”  Klymkowsky said. “What we would like to do is incentivize students to use AI tools to enhance learning and to achieve the grades and goals they want and need.”

Artificial intelligence, or AI, is a technology that allows machines and computers to perform complex tasks and mimic human intelligence and behavior. CU Boulder held a virtual showcase of how the university uses AI on Wednesday.

Klymkowsky, a professor of molecular cellular and developmental biology, created Dewey and Rita using a type of AI called retrieval-augmented generation.

This type of AI is more accurate, Klymkowsky said, because it’s provided with curriculum information, textbooks and research papers that create a knowledge base. The AI draws from this base of information and knows what it can’t answer. So, it won’t speculate or hallucinate. AI hallucinations are when a bot generates incorrect or misleading information.

“This has the advantage that it won’t answer a question it hasn’t been trained on, where a standard ChatGPT will answer any question,” he said.

Dewey can evaluate student answers to questions and identify trends of what students are missing or misunderstanding. It can also determine whether course learning goals are being met.

“We can get a summary of the ideas students are struggling with and we can even get suggestions for instructional improvement,” Klymkowsky said.

Rita is an AI bot that acts as a Socratic tutor. Socratic teaching or tutoring is a strategy to promote critical thinking by giving students questions instead of answers.

Rita is a more challenging bot, Klymkowsky said, because she has to be engaging for students. He said she can usually determine whether a question is answered correctly and pose questions to students about what’s missing or wrong in their answers. She’s improving at engaging in Socratic conversations with students.

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