Today's presentation is from Dr Brendan Sheridan, Teaching and Learning Developer from Te Puna Ako - Centre for Tertiary Teaching and Learning, University of Waikato.
The abstract is: This talk discusses the various factors driving use of Generative AI by students, in particular unauthorised use of Generative AI. It applies an adapted framework of Unified Technology Utilisation and Acceptance Theory 2 proposed by Bouteraa et al., 2024 and compares it to the Academic Integrity Motivation framework of Murdock and Anderman (2006)
Presented on 'motivation factors for Gen Ai use in tertiary education. Covered the framework above (Bouteraa et al.); overviewed more literature along with student engagement along these parameters. The moved to Murdock & Anderman and the case study at UoW.
Summarised the UTAUT & UTAUT2 which is a large framework. Bouteraa et al's driving factors for understanding the diffusion of Gen AI. The second framework on motivators for using Gen AI is tighter and more aligned to Gen AI.
Moved to short review of the literature (6 readings). Themes include Gen Ai being easier to get into then previous AI tools; media commentary and social discussion about Gen AI increase student's willingness to use it. With educational self-efficacy, use of AI connected to a sense of succeeding academically. Some use it as a reflective tool and refine thinking. However, solid disciplinary knowledge needed to use Gen AI effectively. In technological self-efficacy, many ways to use it positively - improved productivity, ability to synthesise content etc. Risks of privacy and transparency acknowledged.
Personal anxiety picked up - performance academic anxiety drives adoption of Gen Ai tools, however, academic integrity affected. Perceptions that Gen Ai use is unethical, this leads t cautious adoption of AI, overly embracing AI content lead to assuming students used AI for assessments, and sceptical students avoiding AI altogether.
In general, contextual and individual influences may push students towards breeching academic integrity.
Commonalities between the frameworks are that the purpose, is weighed up with can it be used and the costs of being caught.
UoW case study (Fester, 2025) on taught Masters programme. Some came from work where Gen AI was used. Students co-constructed AI policy with lecturer. 50% used Gen AI to complete assignments. 74% of students completed the survey.
Awareness of AI and integrity through co-construction of the Ai policy. Students felt well supported and appreciated importance of Gen AI in future work and learning. Various tools were used - Chat GPT, Copilot, Grammarly, Deep Seek. Used to explain concepts, check grammar/spelling, improve / proof read writing, summarise readings, draft communications.
Student perceptions indicate academic integrity policies on their own are insufficient. Saw Gen AI as cognitive/research assistant. Used critical engagement to filter information. Aware of limitations and challenges. Perceived that lecturers need to rethink assessments. Inconsistent messaging across programme on use of AI.
In general the students' motivation factors was on performance, effort and social dimensions. There was awareness of Gen Ai limitation, critical engagement with AI, inconsistent messaging across programme alleviated by lecturer and awareness of academic integrity and understanding the inappropriate use of Gen AI.
Moved to teaching and instructional design response a UoW. Shared the factors around staff engagement and the active PD provided to support lecturers and impacts on self; and across the university.
Considerations for the future: Bouteraa et al framework useful towards understand students' motivation. Motivation and use are not the same. important to mitigate users' anxiety; integrity not only around use but to support student's appropriate use of AI; external factors like user training and clear assignment instructions can help mitigate ideas for self-efficacy and alleviate user anxiety.
Q & A followed.