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AI with Integrity: Bringing Clarity to the Learning Process #AskTurnitin

Mon Jun 22 - Fri Jul 3
Event by Turnitin Official

Got questions about AI in the classroom? Watch this panel discussion — then ask what's on your mind.

We've gathered a panel of educators to come together for a panel discussion on a question many of us are navigating: how can we support authentic student learning in a world where AI is everywhere?

The recording is attached above. Take some time to watch, then share your questions in this thread. We’ll be checking in and responding right here on TEN through July 3.

Answering your questions:

Jason Friend, Educator at Saratoga High School District, California

Jason Friend has been an English teacher at Saratoga High School since 2003. He is a founding member and the current program coordinator of the Media Arts Program, an interdisciplinary academy dedicated to innovative education. Passionate about thinking and writing, Jason has had several articles published in Philosophy Now. He received the Goldin Award for Excellence in Education in 2016, and was named Teacher of the Year for the Los Gatos-Saratoga Union High School District in 2026.

Melissa Rofer, Educator at Los Gatos High School, California

Melissa Rofer has just completed her first year as an English teacher at Los Gatos High School. Previously, she taught English at Cupertino High School from 2004 to 2010. Between these roles, she spent 14 years as a parent volunteer and K-12 substitute teacher. She has her Master's in Education from U.C. Santa Cruz and is a graduate of Humboldt State University.

Audrey Campbell, Manager, Educator Engagement, Turnitin

Audrey Campbell is a Manager of Educator Engagement at Turnitin, where she connects educators with practical, real-world strategies for teaching in a rapidly changing landscape. Before joining Turnitin, she was a classroom teacher for ten years and understands the everyday realities educators face. She’s passionate about helping educators make sense of feedback, learning integrity, and the evolving role of AI in ways that feel supportive and useful.

Karen Smith, Senior Teaching and Learning Specialist at Turnitin

Karen Smith brings 34 years of experience as a public school ELA teacher and literacy coach to her role on Turnitin's Teaching and Learning Innovations team. Since 2021, she has designed instructional resources and professional learning content that help educators worldwide implement Turnitin products effectively. Her extensive background in writing instruction ensures all her work is deeply rooted in pedagogy and academic integrity.

Not sure what to ask? Start here:

"How do I write an AI policy my students will actually read?"

"Should AI use be allowed on some assignments but not others?"

"How do we rebuild a culture of original thinking in an AI-saturated world"

#AskTurnitin Guidelines:

1. Be respectful: Treat all participants with kindness and professionalism.

2. Stay on topic: Questions should relate to AI detection, teaching strategies, and classroom experiences.

3. No product support requests: Technical or account issues should be directed to Turnitin Support

4. Avoid sensitive personal info: Do not share personally identifiable information about yourself, your institution, or students.

5. Engage constructively: Share insights, ask thoughtful questions, and build on others’ contributions.

16 replies

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    • Senior UX (User Experience) Writer
    • Ashleigh_Brewer
    • 5 hrs ago
    • Official response
    • Reported - view

    #AskTurnitin Conversation Starters: How are you redesigning tasks to make student thinking visible? 


    Teachers are innately adaptable. We adapt courses, assignments, instructions, feedback, deadlines, and expectations. In many ways, we are professional tailors within the garments of education: adjusting the thread, fabric, buttons, and seams so the learning experience fits the students in front of us.

    When I think about making student thinking visible, I don’t think it always means adding more steps or creating more work. Often, it means slightly adjusting what we already ask students to do so we can better see the reasoning, decisions, questions, and revisions happening along the way.

    As a former educator, I usually started from the end. If I wanted students to produce a literary analysis of a short story or poem, I first thought about what I needed to see before the final essay: how they were reading, what they noticed, where they were confused, what questions they asked, and how their interpretation changed. That shaped the scaffolding around the assignment.

    Sometimes that meant literature circles with specific roles. Sometimes it meant short reflections after discussion. Sometimes it meant brainstorming, thesis work, rough drafts, quick check-ins, or discussion posts. The point wasn’t to create busywork. The point was to make the learning process visible enough that I could understand how students were getting to the final product.

    By the time I read the final essay, I usually knew the student’s work already. I knew who had struggled through an idea, who had changed direction, who needed more support, and who had skipped parts of the process entirely. That visibility helped me respond to the learning, not just evaluate the product.

    🌟 I think this matters when we talk about AI and assignment design. If students are allowed to use AI, or allowed to opt out, the core question may not be “How do I redesign everything?” It may be “Where can I ask students to show the thinking that is already happening?”

    For example, maybe AI is allowed during brainstorming, especially for students who process ideas through conversation. In that case, students might explain what they asked, what the tool helped them consider, what they rejected, and what they decided to do next. Maybe AI is used to explore possible sources, alongside a lesson on research literacy and evaluating credibility. Students who choose not to use AI can still document their search process, source decisions, and moments of uncertainty.

    In both cases, the learning outcome stays at the center. Students are still practicing analysis, research, writing, revision, and reflection. The difference is that we are asking them to make their choices visible.

    To me, “visible thinking” is not about surveillance or adding another sleeve to a jacket that already fits. It is about changing the thread a bit so the work students are already doing becomes easier to see, discuss, support, and assess with integrity.


    💡 I'm wondering if others in the community might have their own perspective? How are you redesigning tasks to make student thinking visible?

      • Online Community Manager
      • kat_turnitin
      • 1 hr ago
      • Official response
      • Reported - view

       Such a thoughtful way to frame visible thinking, especially the idea that it’s about adjusting what already exists rather than adding more to make student thinking visible.

       

      From our recent poll, one TEN member asked:
      “How could I design an assessment that would allow students to either make effective use of AI, or to elect not to use it (depending on personal preference) while ensuring that core learning outcomes a,,re met?” (submitted anonymously) 

       

       Educator at Los Gatos High School, California, shares with us this answer: 

      I have brought back to the forefront the visibility of the writing process in the classroom and written by hand. Some of the pieces I might have assigned for work at home or on the computer. (As we have started using Clarity that helps with them being able to do some more of it on their laptop again, but I still like to incorporate handwriting and no technology writing.)

      We do a great deal of in class writing and discussing for brainstorming and peer reviewing the first steps of analytical essay writing as well as other types of writing. 

      Students explore the strategies that work best for them as they develop note taking skills which they then hone during lectures and small and whole class discussions to analyze text. We work together on close reading strategies where students identify themes/motifs/quotes/etc., reflective writing to explore personal/global/creative connections to the concepts, as well as the early steps of the essay drafting process. 

      In other words, I have been leaning into the procedures and strategies I utilized in a pre-laptop secondary ELA classroom. For homework, there are checks along the way to try to hold students accountable for their own authentic thinking. 

      ______________________

      “How could I design an assessment that would allow students to either make effective use of AI, or to elect not to use it (depending on personal preference) while ensuring that core learning outcomes are met?” (submitted anonymously)

      For writing I only want to incorporate AI use at the very last stage, and preferably only for upper grades like seniors. Then I would guide students as they learn to leverage LLMs for future career efficiency while still maintaining their own personal writing voice and authentic questioning. 

      For earlier grades I would continue to discuss the current state of AI as it relates to our course content (there are often many literature connections to the concept of AI or technology changes as they impact the human experience). 

      I would like to incorporate more critical reading and current materials activities so that they can identify human writing vs a LLM’s output; this could be an opportunity for students to scratch that AI itch, without it negatively impacting the development of their own academic development. Also it would give them the skills to think critically about this, especially since we cannot necessarily anticipate what it will look like in the future. 

      For Project Based Learning I allow students to use AI to support their acquisition of information and skills outside of ELA, which they then use in an assessment related to our Essential Learning Outcome/Content Standards. 

      --- 

      We’d love to hear others’ experiences on this. Your answers can help educators navigating this in their own classrooms! 

      • Senior Teaching & Learning Innovations Specialist
      • Karen_Turnitin
      • 1 hr ago
      • Official response
      • Reported - view

       Love this very thoughtful response -- it's especially important to think of from the standpoint of not making teachers and students work harder, but to incorporate those processes into a more visible landscape. 

      In the realm of "If I were still in the classroom," I suspect I would do exactly as you described with continuing with those good practices that allow teachers to see how ideas are being sourced and/or developed. 

      If I was surprised by the final product, I knew to have a conversation with students--even before the advent of AI and Turnitin solutions! 

    • Online Community Manager
    • kat_turnitin
    • 2 days ago
    • Official response
    • Reported - view

    Welcome to AI with Integrity: Bringing Clarity to the Learning Process #AskTurnitin!

    We’ve brought together a panel of educators to explore a question many of us are navigating today. This discussion features secondary educators in California who have firsthand experience with how AI is showing up in the classroom.

    We invite you to watch the video above and share your insights and experiences on AI use in your classroom. Our panel will be here to answer your questions.

    This is an open space for thoughtful discussion and shared learning, so we encourage you to join in! 

    • Manager, Educator Engagement
    • Audrey_turnitin
    • 2 days ago
    • Official response
    • Reported - view

    Wow, what a great discussion!

    So grateful to  ,  , and  for jumping into a great conversation on responsible AI use and the modern challenges of learning and teaching in a digital landscape. I'm eager for others to watch our recording and let us know what they think about our range of topics. 

    Check it out and please leave your comments below! 

    • Senior Teaching & Learning Innovations Specialist
    • Karen_Turnitin
    • 2 days ago
    • Official response
    • Reported - view

    Hi all! I'm super excited to have been a part of this panel and engaging with two fantastic educators who are facing the use of AI daily! This was a fun conversation and I was a bit disappointed when our time was over. Hope all you viewers have a similar experience! 

    I can't wait to continue the conversation over the next two weeks! 

    • Online Community Manager
    • kat_turnitin
    • 2 days ago
    • Official response
    • Reported - view

    #AskTurnitin Conversation Starters: How has AI changed when and how you check student work?
     

     Educator at Saratoga High School District, California, shares:

    "As I mentioned in the panel discussion, I’ve stopped thinking about AI detection as something that happens at the “end” of the writing process. Instead, I check for AI use on the earliest possible writing steps, and try to hold one-on-one conversations with every student whose writing has been flagged by Clarity as concerning. Students have been much more receptive and honest when the stakes are low, and this approach has had positive impacts on getting them to do their own work."
     

     Educator at Los Gatos High School, California, shares:

    • Laptops closed for notes unless previously arranged with a student due to an accommodation.
    • Minimal laptop use during class. Specific expectations communicated for when they are used.

    • Typed assignments written in Clarity and/or uploaded to Canvas with a check for AI.

    • Handwritten notes checked regularly.

    • An increased attention to penmanship and spelling. 

    • Increased amount of printed articles, documents etc, so that laptops stay closed more and work is completed on the article or paper/whiteboard/posters/etc.

    • More in-class individual writing and student interaction in pairs, small groups, and whole class.

    We’d love to know: Are you shifting AI checks earlier in the writing process? What has that looked like in your classroom so far? 

    • Online Teacher's Assistant Lead
    • Timothy_Baggenstos
    • 2 days ago
    • Reported - view

    Thank you for sharing this discussion. It was helpful!

    I'd love to get perspective on this question both from Turnitin employees and from educators. When using Turnitin Clarity, do you find that students ever have privacy concerns about their writing process being recorded?

      • Principal Product Marketing Manager
      • nnanda
      • yesterday
      • Official response
      • Reported - view

       Hi and thank you for your question! 

      We conducted extensive research prior to the launch of Clarity and also during the beta phase, where we spoke to a lot of students. What we understood from them was rather insightful; while some students expressed anxiety about instructors seeing their early drafts and had privacy concerns, most felt that the writing report and seeing the writing process will ensure their work is marked appropriately and fairly. One student actually said that "this levels the playing field,” noting how they would not feel it fair if a student who uses generative AI inappropriately receives higher marks than other students’ original work.
      Another thing we've noticed is that 'show your work' is quite a common ask from instructors. Increasingly, students are being asked to submit their Google version histories or share a record of how they conducted their research in order to establish the authenticity of the submission. With Clarity, students have realised that we take that burden away. They don't have to worry about making copious notes or saving drafts, because Clarity does that for them.

      • Online Teacher's Assistant Lead
      • Timothy_Baggenstos
      • yesterday
      • Reported - view

       That's helpful to know!

    • Online Community Manager
    • kat_turnitin
    • yesterday
    • Official response
    • Reported - view

    #AskTurnitin Conversation Starters: When did you first realize AI was changing student work? What moment made it real for you? 

      • Senior Teaching & Learning Innovations Specialist
      • Karen_Turnitin
      • 1 hr ago
      • Reported - view

       I'll go first here! This moment was different for me at Turnitin than for educators still working with students, but no less impactful. 

      I had spent the better part of a year working on a resource pack, and my manager said we were doing a "hard pivot" because of ChatGPT. At the time, I didn't know what that meant, but I quickly found out! Like many educators, this shift was immediate and hasn't changed except to possibly become even busier with the passage of time. Three new resources were prepared by me and other teammates, which has since become the Learning Integrity in the Age of AI instructional resource pack.

      Since then we have added multiple resources in both US and UK English (we're close to 40 resources for students, teachers, and administrators), and many of those first resources have been revised at least once, and many more than once! I believe we're on the 4th iteration of the Annotated Hotlist, for example, with the last one being focused solely on Turnitin Clarity. 

      P.S. The resource pack I was referring to became the Peer Review and Feedback instructional resource pack, which if you haven't visited, is worth the time. And all signs point to a revision of that pack to incorporate new tools and strategies as AI has changed that part of the educational landscape as well!

    • Online Teacher's Assistant Lead
    • Timothy_Baggenstos
    • 4 hrs ago
    • Reported - view

    This is not a question but rather an appreciative comment. I really appreciated being able to hear the insights of current educators who are actively using Turnitin products like Clarity. They bring a helpful, on-the-ground perspective about the benefits and challenges of handling AI usage. I'd love to see more discussions of this nature.

      • Online Community Manager
      • kat_turnitin
      • 4 hrs ago
      • Official response
      • Reported - view

       Thank you for sharing this, Timothy. Bringing in real, on-the-ground experiences is something we value, and we’ll definitely continue to feature more educator voices in the coming days. Stay tuned, there’s plenty more insight and discussion ahead! 

      • Manager, Educator Engagement
      • Audrey_turnitin
      • 2 hrs ago
      • Official response
      • Reported - view

       - We are so grateful for this post! As a former educator, I love connecting with teachers who are still in classrooms and lecture halls, learning from them and bringing their wisdom to this forum. We will absolutely keep discussing AI usage here in TEN and appreciate your engagement immensely.  

      • Senior Teaching & Learning Innovations Specialist
      • Karen_Turnitin
      • 1 hr ago
      • Official response
      • Reported - view

       I want to echo my colleagues' gratitude here. It is only through active engagement with educators that I can do the work at Turnitin that I do. Speaking with educators like  and  and reading posts like yours (and others!) helps me to stay current on concerns firsthand, and use that information to fill in gaps for others with resources to supplement the how and why that so often comes up with the use of Turnitin solutions. 

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