

Summer Friday: AI & Education; 1963; 100 Years of Flying; Helping Hands
Aug 29, 2025
Hua Hsu, a New Yorker staff writer and Bard College professor, discusses the repercussions of AI like ChatGPT on college writing and student learning. Jessica Gould, an education reporter, shares insights on the collaboration between Big Tech and teachers' unions for AI training in NYC schools. Peniel Joseph examines the crucial events of 1963 and their influence on civil rights. Bob van der Linden reflects on a century of aviation, while listeners share personal stories of unexpected acts of kindness that shaped their lives.
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Eureka Moments Are At Risk
- Widespread student use of AI risks short-circuiting the hard thinking moments that make writing educationally valuable.
- Hua Hsu warns those 'eureka' moments may vanish if students outsource difficult work to tools like ChatGPT.
Students Outsourcing Unwanted Courses
- Hua Hsu describes NYU students Alex and Eugene who use AI to do most of their coursework and retain little.
- Alex engineered AI to handle about 90% of an art history class he didn't care about.
Colleges Embrace What They Once Fought
- Hsu says the panic about student laziness is partly justified but tied to a broader societal shift embracing AI.
- Colleges are moving from trying to ban AI to partnering with companies, changing incentives for students.