Ethics, AI, and Authorship

Ways we engage with writing and literacy have shifted dramatically due to technological innovations, raising urgent questions about ethics, authorship, voice, and academic integrity and (dis)honesty. How can we develop our writing knowledge and literacy skills alongside rapidly changing tools? What challenges, issues, and opportunities do technological developments offer for the ways in which writing and learning will happen throughout life? This course examines what ethical, legal and safety issues arise in the use of digital technologies and resources and how they might shape authorship and a writer’s voice and agency. The goals are to: 1) deepen understandings of key developments in writing technologies and related social transformations; 2) strengthen abilities in fair, inclusive, effective, ethical methods of dialogue and collaboration; 3) strengthen abilities for metacognitive learning; 4) and deepen genre knowledge and rhetorical awareness through explorations in the contexts of various discourse communities.

Weekly writing assignments and collaborative learning activities are facilitated through readings, case studies, and projects. Readings include short works that explain and critically analyze ongoing developments in writing related technologies. Class sessions alternate between mini-lectures and seminar discussions exploring changing historical contexts and socio-technologies of writing. Writing activities include peer review, structured collaborations, and individual as well as group exercises with various multimodal genres. There are two class sessions per week.

Students must come prepared to challenge themselves and others in supportive ways. This course fulfills the first-year writing requirement but is also appropriate for more advanced students interested in exploring issues of ethics, authorship, academic integrity and (dis)honesty from a human ecological perspective.

Students are evaluated on class participation and contributions in individual and group activities/assignments that demonstrate progress in meeting the four course goals.

Course Number
HS2124
Area of Study
Literature & Writing
Course Level
Intermediate/advanced
Instructors
Gray Cox, Su Yin Khor