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Academic journals’ AI policies fail to curb the surge in AI-assisted academic writing

AI in Education EditorialUpdated July 14, 20261 min readRead source
Academic journals’ AI policies fail to curb the surge in AI-assisted academic writing
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Academic journals’ AI policies fail to curb the surge in AI-assisted academic writing  PNAS

Analysis & Perspectives

People Also Ask

What is the most important recent news in AI?
Key recent developments in AI include the release of multimodal models capable of understanding images and audio alongside text, growing regulatory action in the US and EU, widespread deployment of AI tools in corporate productivity software, and expanding AI tutoring pilots in public K-12 schools across several US states.
Where can I follow news in AI reliably?
Reliable sources for AI news include MIT Technology Review, Wired, Axios on AI newsletter, The Verge's AI coverage, and academic preprint servers like arXiv for research. For education-specific AI news, EdSurge and aiineducation.io aggregate and contextualize developments relevant to teachers, students, and administrators.
How does AI news affect education policy?
News about AI capabilities and risks directly influences school district decisions on tool adoption, academic integrity policies, and teacher training investments. High-profile incidents of AI misuse in schools often trigger district-wide policy reviews, while positive research findings accelerate pilots and procurement conversations.
What is happening with AI regulation in education?
Regulators worldwide are examining AI in education. The EU AI Act classifies AI used in educational assessment as high-risk, requiring transparency and human oversight. In the US, federal guidance from the Department of Education is advisory, while states like California are advancing bills requiring districts to adopt AI use policies.

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