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30 sats \ 0 replies \ @endothermicdev 15h \ on: Should universities embrace or crack down on student AI usage? AskSN
I still think the most useful degrees are technical - engineering, medicine, etc.. From my experience with a mechanical engineering degree, most of the grades were from tests and the homework was essentially just your own practice and reinforcement. If you're not learning the equations and solving the problems on your own there's no way to reasonably complete the tests. I don't see how AI significantly impacts those. Computer science degrees may be in trouble, even though I think there's some value in learning and pursuing a degree there.
I think the technologies we interact with do impact the wiring of our brains at a fairly deep level. Even the ancient Greek orators were concerned with reading and writing that it would weaken students memories. AI offers some compelling uses, but I worry about the side effects of dependency and mental outsourcing a lot. Especially when the results can be mediocre to outright flawed, what happens when the ability to think critically about AI output is simultaneously impaired?