Blue Books Are Back on College Campuses

Students who are in college today grew up with iPhones. For the past three years, they've also had access to ChatGPT to do their homework for them. There are ways to know whether a paper has been written by artificial intelligence, but it's not as easy or reliable as Googling a phrase to check for plagiarism. College professors know students are using AI, since all the major services show usage way down during the summer break months. So what is a professor to do when it comes to final exams and you want to find out if the student has learned anything at all? This year, many are going low-tech and requiring students to bring blue books.

Blue books are standardized blank booklets of paper that are used to write out exam answers. This may frighten students, but it's not easy for the professors, either, since the students haven't used actual handwriting for their college years, and that makes deciphering what they've written really tough. But these students (as well as many of the rest of us) gave up handwriting because a machine can do it better. Is it any different to give up studying and learning because a machine can do it better? Read about the return to blue book exams in an article from The Wall Street Journal. -via Slashdot


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Blue Book Pro Tip:
Skip half a page and just start writing statements that answer the question. Three of them is plenty. Go back and write an introductory sentence/paragraph in the blank space. If you have time, go to the end and write a summary.
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