Justice Calls WVU Curriculum Bloated, Rejects State Bailout

Justice said he did not sense a call for WVU funding help from House or Senate leadership.

With a $1.8 billion state surplus, some legislators in north central West Virginia are asking the state to help West Virginia University out of its $45 million dollar deficit and resulting academic transformation.

Asked in a Wednesday media briefing about providing emergency financial help for its flagship university, Gov. Jim Justice said he questioned the school’s overall academic offerings.

“There is absolutely no question that what has happened is some level of bloating in programs and things that maybe we ought not be teaching at WVU,” Justice said.

Justice also said he did not sense an urgent call for WVU funding help from the state House or Senate.  

“I do not think there is an appetite from the standpoint of the leadership in the legislature at this point in time to basically bail out WVU,” he said.

Justice said giving WVU “one-time-money” would offer limited help and the state needs to be in a backfill situation. He said he has faith in WVU leadership.

“I have all the confidence in the world and President Gee and the Board of Governors that WVU will get their house in order,” Justice said.

A majority of the WVU Board of Governors are appointed by the governor. They will meet Friday to make a final determination on an academic transformation plan.

WVU Students May No Longer Qualify For Academic Honors Society 

West Virginia University’s proposal to close its World Languages department is drawing attention from national organizations. 

West Virginia University’s (WVU) proposal to close its World Languages Department is drawing attention from national organizations. 

Last week, the national academic honors society Phi Beta Kappa released a statement on the school’s proposed department elimination. It is a summary of a letter that was sent to the university’s administration. 

The statement expressed a grave concern with the proposal, and stated that language study is an essential component of education.

“A comprehensive arts and sciences education, which includes the study of language, fosters critical thinking, creativity, and engaged citizenship,” the statement said. “Elimination of a central pillar of the arts and sciences would unnecessarily reduce opportunities for deserving students to reap these life-long benefits.”

Founded in 1776, the society promotes a commitment to the liberal arts and sciences and counts many famous figures among its members including several U.S. Supreme Court judges.

Frederick Lawrence, national secretary and CEO of Phi Beta Kappa, said membership in the society requires students to show proficiency in a foreign language.

“As a school that represents the values of Phi Beta Kappa, that school should continue to have the opportunity for students to engage in study of an international language,” he said.

Lawrence said the society is awaiting the final results of the review and appeals process. 

“We’re best to wait and let this process play out,” he said. “We wanted to be involved in that process, which is the reason that the letter that was sent and was also sent to the chapter so that the chapter on the campus could be involved in the appeals process and the reconsideration.”

Amy Gentzler, a WVU psychology professor and the university’s Phi Beta Kappa chapter secretary and treasurer, said the society’s officers are concerned that Phi Beta Kappa would not continue at the university.

“We wouldn’t be able to meet the criteria set up by national Phi Beta Kappa to have students be proficient in language,” she said. “We would essentially be forfeiting the only chapter in West Virginia.”

WVU’s chapter of the society is the only one in the state and was founded in 1910.

Language faculty at George Washington University (GWU) also released a statement last week urging WVU to reassess the proposal. In its initial announcement of the proposed cuts, WVU listed GWU as an example of a university that had removed its language requirement, a claim that the statement rejects.

The GWU faculty pointed towards requirements for students of international affairs, as well as other majors, to complete multiple semesters of language study.

The statement ends by suggesting that if students do not receive modern training at WVU they “look elsewhere for a university that truly understands and values what our current world requires of the next generation of leaders.”

Despite Concerns, Educators See Artificial Intelligence As A Classroom Tool

Artificial intelligence is raising the possibility that students could cheat when writing papers, but educators and technology companies are ahead of the curve.

Artificial intelligence is raising the possibility that students could cheat when writing papers. But educators and technology companies say they are ahead of the curve.

Since its launch in November, the artificial intelligence-based program ChatGPT has drawn a lot of attention for its ability to quickly generate written passages based on simple prompts. Tell it to write you a 500-word essay on “The Old Man and The Sea,” and within moments, you have a completed assignment that may have taken a student hours to write. With so much attention has come a lot of criticism and concern, especially in the realm of education.

“ChatGPT Is the Wake-Up Call Schools Need to Limit Tech in Classrooms,” reads one headline in Time magazine. 

But educators and academic organizations weren’t caught flat-footed by the new technology.

Zack Bennett is a distinguished machine learning scientist for Turnitin, a software that helps to detect plagiarism in students’ work. In early April, the company launched an update of their product to help identify AI generated writing, something that Bennett says can be done due to patterns. 

“What it comes down to is that the language models that generate text tend to produce very average or probable words when they’re generating the text, whereas humans don’t really do that,” Bennett said. “They tend to do things in more surprising fashion, they use unexpected words or new ideas appear in their papers. We were able to hone in on that and tune a detector to distinguish between what a student writes versus what an AI generates.”

Even the creators of ChatGPT, OpenAI, admit the program has flaws. It is prone to certain biases from the data it’s trained on and has regularly been observed to make up information to fit a given prompt. Bennett says that as technology changes, everyone needs to adapt with it.

“I think also there’s a role for parents in all this to talk to their children, find out what they know about the tool. Start a conversation about AI literacy, what it means to have these tools available, because there will be temptations to use these in ways that are not optimal,” he said. “It’s important to remember they are tools. You want to use them mindfully, you want to use them to not replace you but augment what it is that you’re doing.”

Annie Chechitelli is the chief product officer for Turnitin. She agrees that ChatGPT and other similar AI writing systems aren’t just a threat to classrooms, but a tool.

“We’re seeing some really innovative things teachers are doing to incorporate these tools into student learning through experimentation, and I think is that going to continue,” she said. “We hope it continues as we have more conversations with educators on ways that we can help that or maybe devise new opportunities for tools that help students write. With that said, when we do talk to teachers, their request is just that there’s some simple measure to help them say, ‘Hey, there might be some AI writing here.’”

Educators at every level recognize the potential for abuse that AI writing systems present, but as Chechitelli says, they are also creative enough to realize that they can be harnessed as tools.

Josh Holley is the technology coordinator for Jackson County schools. He is married to an employee of West Virginia Public Broadcasting. 

Holley said his district has plagiarism detection software in place for teachers to use but hasn’t yet heard of an instance of an AI being used on an assignment.

“I don’t think that the students have really tried to use it because the teachers, right when we first got (the software), were like, ‘Hey, look what this can do.’ And the kids are, like, ‘Oh, okay, better not try this.’” he said. “We wanted to get ahead of the game.”

What Holley has seen are educators starting to integrate the new technology into their classrooms.

“One of my fellow technology integration specialists has really dived into using ChatGPT for creating interactive presentations. You type in the topic that you want to teach about, and it  creates its own, sort of like a PowerPoint, that’s what it looks like,” Holley said. “It’s more interactive, and the kids get to do more stuff with it. It just generates all the information for the teacher.”

Despite the promise of AI writing if used correctly, the potential for abuse remains. Applications like Turnitin don’t determine student misconduct. That job is left to someone like Paul Heddings, director of academic integrity at West Virginia University. His office is tasked with investigating and adjudicating allegations of potential academic misconduct for the entire WVU system. Despite its novelty, Heddings says AI is not outside of his office’s expectations.

“That’s not abnormal for academic integrity. Generally, if you think about artificial intelligence as a continuum itself, it’s something that’s been around for a very long time in various places in our lives,” he said. “Academic dishonesty is one of those things that’s ever growing and we have to be evolving with the times.” 

Heddings sees academic integrity as a question of fairness for other students, but also as another opportunity to teach.

“Rather than just focusing on bad behavior, I place a lot of weight on trying to position the student for success in the future,” he said. “Many of the plagiarism cases we see are instances where students are not confident writers, or maybe they don’t understand the distinction between patch writing, and paraphrasing, and straight plagiarism. We really have an opportunity to help students learn and grow, because college is a time of profound growth, and it’s not only growth within the classroom.”

The AI writing landscape is growing and changing quickly, as companies including tech giants like Meta and Alphabet come out with their own platforms. 

But Heddings and others are confident that the world of education is ready for the change. WVU has already put together an artificial intelligence taskforce, with Heddings as a co-chair.

“Even though it’s easy to become kind of sensationalized about it or be a doomsdayer, I think our faculty have been very well grounded in the understanding that this is something to be aware of from an academic integrity perspective, but also a potential tool for the future,” Heddings said. 

“There’s not a cookie cutter approach to artificial intelligence, but we need to give some guidelines to our faculty to help them better understand what tools and resources my office has, and others on campus have, and then how best we can integrate ChatGPT and other models into our curriculum to really harness the power that they have and help prepare our students even better for the future.”

College-going Rate For Eligible W.Va. Graduates Dips Below 50 Percent

The college-going rate for eligible 2021 graduates has dropped to just 46 percent.

The college-going rate for eligible 2021 graduates has dropped to just 46 percent.

This dropoff marks the first time the metric has dropped below 50 percent since tracking began in 2001. It includes students who have reported their standardized test scores to four-year public institutions and two-year community and technical colleges.

At an interim meeting of the Legislative Oversight Commission on Education Accountability (LOCEA), Matt Turner of the Higher Education Policy Commission says this dropoff may be because of pandemic-related factors.

“Just even in the fall of 2021, the college courses were still a hybrid mix, there was a lot of uncertainty, a lot of folks were coming to the class and they’d have to go back home,” Turner said. “We believe that there probably was a bit of a sour taste from Zoom exhaustion, we’ll call it, and some concern from students that, ‘I’m not sure I want to pay for a college experience that is going to be remote.’”

Turner also noted that struggles with both the pandemic and the ongoing opioid crisis could specifically be adding to the academic difficulties of first-generation students from rural areas.

The data comes from the yearly Academic Readiness Report shown to the LOCEA by the Higher Education Policy Commission and Council for Community and Technical College Education. The report measures post-secondary students’ ACT and SAT scores and the enrollment and completion of college-level coursework.

Other trends in the report are more positive. Average ACT scores increased in 25 counties and English and math readiness rates increased in 36 counties over the past year.

Physical Activity May Improve Academic Performance

An increasing body of research is showing that students who have time for physical activity in their school day tend to perform better on tests and have an easier time concentrating.

 

“The U.S. has lagged behind a lot of other countries in the world, like Finland, Japan, other nations that have excelled in mathematics and English,” said West Virginia University professor James Hannon. “At the same time we’ve cut physical activities back in schools.”

Hannon has overseen several studies in the last couple years around physical activity and academic performance. In one study, his group had students take a mathematics test after 20 minutes of vigorous physical activity. Meanwhile another group of classmates watched a 20- minute video on women’s soccer.

“And they performed significantly better after engaging in the aerobic exercise – it was anywhere from 11-22 percent improvement on the math test actual test score – after engaging in the aerobic exercise,” he said. 
 

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Doctoral students Annie Machamer and Hannah Kipfer demonstrate some activities students might do during the course of a school day.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that children participate in at least an hour of physical activity daily. According to a 2013 study, only a quarter of US students reported actually achieving that goal.

But in order to incorporate physical activity into the school day in a more comprehensive way, schools need policies that support those initiatives.

In 2014, West Virginia passed a bill that said, among other things, West Virginia elementary school students were required to have at least 30 minutes of physical education three days a week and 30 minutes of recess daily.

“So what that means is it challenges administrators – it challenges classroom teachers, staff – to be more cognizant of how important physical activity is throughout the school day,” said Emily Jones, a colleague of Hannon’s at WVU.

“So that might be classroom activity breaks or energizers, or after a certain period of time kids can actually get up out of their chair, whether it’s before testing, after testing, throughout the school day,” she said. Other measures include “not eliminating or reducing recess, so not taking away recess for poor behavior, or not this low value of physical activity, throughout the school day.”

Doctoral students Hannah Kipfer and Annie Machamer said teachers can incorporate more physical activity into their day in two easy ways. First, take a brain break, which is basically just a minute or two when kids can get up and move through silly activities, like doing jumping jacks while reciting the alphabet.

The next is by actually incorporating physical activity into lessons. For instance, learning the mean, median and mode by doing pushups and counting the results.

The kids love it, but for teachers it isn’t always as easy.

“And some of the barriers were accessibility of time. That’s a big thing we see… scheduling throughout the school day – they have to change their lesson plan essentially, and that takes time out of their school day,” said Machamer.

Machamer said even though there were some barriers to incorporating what they called “active lessons” into classes, participating teachers did report their students were able to concentrate more at the end.

Researchers are now looking to find out which types of exercise are most effective at improving academic performance. In the meantime, simply incorporating some kind, any kind of, physical activity into the school day seems to help.

 

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation.

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