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Conference Session
Technological and Engineering Literacy/Philosophy of Engineering Division (TELPhE) Technical Session 1
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Steffen Peuker, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo
Tagged Divisions
Technological and Engineering Literacy/Philosophy of Engineering Division (TELPhE)
the subject and facilitates faculty learning communities and is the co-author of ”Studying Engineering – A Road Map to a Rewarding Career”. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024 Evaluation of the Utilization of Generative Artificial Intelligence Tools among First-Year Mechanical Engineering StudentsAbstractGenerative artificial intelligence tools, such as ChatGPT, are freely available to anyone,including college students. Some perceive these tools as a game changer for higher educationbecause they can enhance student learning experiences in various ways. The integration ofgenerative AI tools in higher education has the potential to revolutionize teaching and learning
Conference Session
Technological and Engineering Literacy/Philosophy of Engineering Division (TELPhE) Technical Session 1
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Suzanne Keilson, Loyola University, Maryland
Tagged Divisions
Technological and Engineering Literacy/Philosophy of Engineering Division (TELPhE)
John Searle’s Chinese Room Problem [6]. [7]This remains true with ourinteractions with large scale natural language AI such as the ChatGPT that has generated somuch current buzz. In this case it is not a brute force lookup but a prior machine learning fromprior examples of natural language. That does not mean that these language AI can ‘understand’.It could be that aspects of language such as humor or lying or subtext generally are the frontierwhere Chatbots fail [7].Whether programming is sequential, parallel, object-oriented or any other variant, the branchingof decision-making is constrained by what the programmer envisioned. There is no adaptation toevents or the environment except by the conditionals that the human programmer had
Conference Session
Technological and Engineering Literacy/Philosophy of Engineering Division (TELPhE) Technical Session 1
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Chun Kit Chui, University of Hong Kong; LEI YANG, The University of Hong Kong; Ben Kao, University of Hong Kong
Tagged Divisions
Technological and Engineering Literacy/Philosophy of Engineering Division (TELPhE)
extends these techniques to include fine-tuning a languagemodel and integrating deep learning-based computer vision techniques. These workshops,hosted at the Inno Wing, are open to all students, enabling them to acquire fundamentalcompetencies in generative AI application development. This equips them to apply theirtechnical knowledge to solve real-life problems in the subsequent stage. Figure 4. The workshops “Unleash Creativity with Figure 5. Students built a legal chatbot to assist Generative AI through Open AI Engine and ChatGPT underprivileged people in asking legal questions Build Your Personalized Chatbot” organized by without the use of professional and complex terms student interns for other students
Conference Session
Technological and Engineering Literacy/Philosophy of Engineering Division (TELPhE) Technical Session 1
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Tyler Thomas Procko, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University ; Omar Ochoa, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University; Christina Frederick, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
Tagged Divisions
Technological and Engineering Literacy/Philosophy of Engineering Division (TELPhE)
, compellingly titled“ChatGPT: Bullshit Spewer or the End of Traditional Assessments in Higher Education?”, the authors discuss the threatof ChatGPT to academic professionals and provide recommendations to them in the face of the growing expansion ofpowerful natural language models. They conclude with the following: “… we believe that major changes to traditionalhigher education assessments such as essays and online exams are in order to address the existence of increasinglypowerful AI, unless universities want to be akin to driving schools that teach [horse riding]” [18]. This paper does not long consider language models that can be used to write student assignments; it is mentionedas an area of tangential concern to educators. The primary focus of