The Boston Globe

Typewriter­s: the anti-ai tool

Instructor forces students to forgo online assistance

- By Jocelyn Gecker Linkin Park · Google

The scene is right out of the 1950s. Students are pecking away at manual typewriter­s, the machines dinging at the end of each line.

Once each semester, Grit matthias Phelps, a German language instructor at Cornell university, introduces her students to the raw feeling of typing without online assistance. No screens, online dictionari­es, spellcheck­ers, or delete keys.

The exercise started in spring 2023 as Phelps became frustrated with the reality that students were using generative AI and online translatio­n platforms to churn out grammatica­lly perfect assignment­s.

“what’s the point of me reading it if it’s already correct anyway, and you didn’t write it yourself ? Could you produce it without your computer?” said Phelps.

She wanted students to understand what writing, thinking, and classrooms were like before everything turned digital. So, she found a few dozen old manual typewriter­s in thrift shops and online marketplac­es, and created what her syllabus calls an “analog” assignment.

It might be premature to say that typewriter­s are making a comeback beyond Cornell’s campus. But the revival is part of a national trend toward oldschool testing methods like inclass pen-and-paper exams and oral tests to prevent AI use for assignment­s on laptops.

Students arrived for class on a recent analog day to find typewriter­s at the desks, some with German and some with QWERTY keyboards.

“I was so confused. I had no idea what was happening. I’d seen typewriter­s in movies, but they don’t tell you how a typewriter works,” said Catherine mong, 19, a freshman in Phelps’s Intro to German class. “I didn’t know there was a whole science to using a typewriter.”

Like a rotary phone, the manual typewriter appears simple but is not intuitive to the smartphone generation. Phelps demonstrat­ed how to feed the paper manually, striking the keys with force but not so hard the letters would smudge. She explained that the dinging bell signifies the end of a line and the need to manually return the carriage to start the next line.

“Everything slows down. It’s like back in the old days when you really did one thing at a time. And there was joy in doing it,” said Phelps, who brings in her two children, aged 7 and 9, to serve as “tech support” and ensure no one has their phones out.

The assignment carries lessons beyond simply how to use a typewriter, which is the whole point.

“It dawned on me that the difference with typing on a typewriter is not just how you interact with the typewriter, but how you interact with the world around you,” said computer science major Ratchaphon Lertdamron­gwong, a sophomore, whose class had to write a critique of a German movie they’d watched.

In the absence of screens, there are no notificati­ons to distract you as you write. without every answer readily available at his fingertips, he asked his classmates for help, which Phelps heartily encouraged.

“while writing the essay, I had to talk a lot more, socialize a lot more, which I guess was normal back then,” Lertdamron­gwong said, referring to the typewriter era.

without a delete key and the ability to correct every mistake, he paused to think more intentiona­lly about his writing.

“This might sound bad, but I was forced to actually think about the problem on my own instead of delegating to AI or Google search,” he said.

 ?? LAUREN PETRACCA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Students used typewriter­s during a German writing assignment at Cornell University last month.
LAUREN PETRACCA/ASSOCIATED PRESS Students used typewriter­s during a German writing assignment at Cornell University last month.

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