Waiting for the revolution: how higher education institutions initially responded to ChatGPT

被引:6
作者
Korseberg, Lene [1 ]
Elken, Mari [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] NIFU Nord Inst Studies Innovat Res & Educ, Oslo, Norway
[2] Univ Oslo, Dept Educ, Oslo, Norway
关键词
Artificial intelligence; ChatGPT; Digitalisation; Higher education; Sensemaking; Organisational response;
D O I
10.1007/s10734-024-01256-4
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Although debates regarding the integration of digital technologies in higher education are far from new, the launch of ChatGPT in November 2022 was considered by many as something different from the developments that had come before. This article explores how higher education institutions make sense of the potentiality inherent in artificial intelligence and the early responses to the proliferation of ChatGPT. Through a qualitative interview-based study carried out at three HEIs in Norway, and applying Scott's (2005) three pillars of institutions as an analytical framework, the article examines the type of change pressure ChatGPT was perceived to represent in the period following its launch and the type of organizational response this perception warranted. The findings show that while it was expected that ChatGPT and related technologies not only could threaten - and potentially challenge - key norms and values in the long run, in the short term it was primarily perceived as a regulatory issue that needed to be controlled by higher education institutions. The article points to an epistemic and temporal imbalance in both the expectations and response to ChatGPT, coupled with a lack of technological competence to fully consider the kind of transformation that artificial intelligence technology potentially represents. Coupled with the sense of artificial intelligence being a "moving target", this led higher education institutions to an initial state of organizational paralysis, in turn adopting a "wait and see" strategy.
引用
收藏
页码:953 / 968
页数:16
相关论文
共 26 条
  • [1] Baker T., 2019, Educ-AI-tion rebooted? Exploring the future of artificial intelligence in schools and colleges
  • [2] Discourses of artificial intelligence in higher education: a critical literature review
    Bearman, Margaret
    Ryan, Juliana
    Ajjawi, Rola
    [J]. HIGHER EDUCATION, 2023, 86 (02) : 369 - 385
  • [4] The impact of online automated feedback on students' reflective journal writing in an EFL course
    Cheng, Gary
    [J]. INTERNET AND HIGHER EDUCATION, 2017, 34 : 18 - 27
  • [5] Chatting and cheating: Ensuring academic integrity in the era of ChatGPT
    Cotton, Debby R. E.
    Cotton, Peter A. A.
    Shipway, J. Reuben
    [J]. INNOVATIONS IN EDUCATION AND TEACHING INTERNATIONAL, 2024, 61 (02) : 228 - 239
  • [6] Leadership is needed for ethical ChatGPT: Character, assessment, and learning using artifiicial intelligence (AI)
    Crawford, Joseph
    Cowling, Michael
    Allen, Kelly -Ann
    [J]. JOURNAL OF UNIVERSITY TEACHING AND LEARNING PRACTICE, 2023, 20 (03)
  • [7] ChatGPT in medical imaging higher education
    Currie, G.
    Singh, C.
    Nelson, T.
    Nabasenja, C.
    Al-Hayek, Y.
    Spuur, K.
    [J]. RADIOGRAPHY, 2023, 29 (04) : 792 - 799
  • [8] Flobakk-Sitter F., 2024, 20247 NIFU
  • [9] Garrison D. R., 2004, Internet and Higher Education, V7, P95, DOI 10.1016/j.iheduc.2004.02.001
  • [10] Gibbs G. R., 2008, Analyzing qualitative data, DOI [10.4135/9781849208574.n4, DOI 10.4135/9781849208574]