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A new survey found 97% of Gen Z students have used AI -- and many are now leaning on tools like ChatGPT to write essays, finish homework, prep for tests and even submit college applications.
English teachers who judged the essays were able to identify work written by AI.
Using ChatGPT to write essays may be eroding critical thinking skills by Bob Yirka, Phys.org edited by Lisa Lock, reviewed by Robert Egan Editors' notes ...
When it comes to applying for a job or college admissions, AI may make your essays sound "too good" and your prospective boss could realize it wasn't you who wrote it.
On Writers and Writing: Essays by Henry James, edited by Michael Gorra (New York Review Books, 408 pp., $24.95) The criticism of Henry James (1843–1916) is replete with imperiousness. We can hear this ...
Norris, editor-in-chief of Electric Literature, brings together 17 essays on trans life in America in this stunning anthology. Each piece considers the intersection between race and gender against ...
Book Review: New essays from writer Richard Russo on how his life informs his art Half memoir and half cultural criticism, readers will enjoy learning more about the inspiration behind some of ...
Essays on OFWs highlight the socio-economic impact of labor migration on families and communities. The authors explore how transnational networks influence Filipino identity, blending local ...
The federal government is following their lead, using such essays to continue awarding tens of billions of dollars in contracts—involving everything from accounting software to the construction of ...
A survey published by Kaplan received more than 300 responses from pre-law students about their thoughts on artificial intelligence usage in law school admissions essays.
Students are using AI to write scholarship essays. Does it work? By Olivia Sanchez The Hechinger Report,Updated April 9, 2025, 2:50 p.m.
Review: ‘A Man of Two Faces’ author’s essays are about being an ‘other’ Nonfiction: Viet Thanh Nguyen’s “To Save and to Destroy” grew out of a series of lectures at Harvard.
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