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Abstract The discourse surrounding the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in higher education has been dominated by a sense of intrigue, uncertainty, and apprehension. Higher education is faced with the challenge of addressing this emerging technology within their academic settings. In order to tackle the use of AI in the classroom head-on, a teaching team consisting of an instructor and a librarian sought to showcase how AI can be conscientiously and responsibly integrated into the existing curriculum. The teaching team designed an instruction module with two goals in mind: first, to train students on how to use a leading AI large language model generative chatbot, ChatGPT, and second, on how to analyze and interpret the synthetically generated outputs. This paper presents a preliminary analysis of the efficacy and impact of this instructional module. The approach adopted by the teaching team is grounded in the American Association of Colleges and Universities (AAC skills which are increasingly recognized as an important part of student development and success in engineering education, and essential in the development of WCES's. In the current Fall 2023 semester, an AI-L module was added, with the belief that AI is an emerging, and essential component of being a WCES. The AI-L module was delivered in two sessions to 128 students. In the first session, students were asked to create their own ChatGPT account, and were instructed on how generative large language model AI systems work. In small groups and as a whole class, students discussed how to create effective prompts, and how ChatGPT responds to prompts. In the second session, students learned how ChatGPT processes information and constructs its outputs. Students also discussed the limitations of AI bots, and learned the importance of thinking critically about AI-generated content. Subsequently, the teaching team equipped students with a rubric based on the VALUES dimensions to evaluate content generated by AI tools. In this paper, a preliminary assessment of the effectiveness of this AI-L instruction module is presented. Initial observations indicate that the module seems to have been effective in training students to recognize and critically evaluate AI-generated content. Students were surprised and intrigued by how much AI is capable of doing, and eager to learn how to be responsible users of such technologies. As a result of this instruction module, this cohort of first year engineering students seemed to possess a more comprehensive understanding of how ChatGPT can both facilitate and potentially hinder their educational and professional development. This empowered them to make informed decisions about the extent and manner in which they wish to engage with AI technology in their current studies and in the future as engineers and as lifelong learners.
Feldman et al. (Sun,) studied this question.