
Florida Southern College instructor, students strike the right AI balance in the classroom with ĂŰĚŇapp tool
The challenge
Like his peers at Florida Southern College (FSC) and broadly across higher education, Professor Larry Young is navigating the choppy waters of generative AI in the classroom. Students increasingly turn to tools such as ChatGPT and Gemini to retrieve ready-made answers to difficult questions and concepts in their coursework. But quick wins can shortchange the deeper understanding and critical thinking they need to succeed â now and in the future.
The solution
ĂŰĚŇappâs AI-Powered Study Tool, available in select ĂŰĚŇapp eTextbooks and MyLabÂŽ and MasteringÂŽ courses, is an ideal solution for Young. It provides individualized support, practice, and feedback to learners directly within their assigned materials.
With ĂŰĚŇappâs AI tools, Young â who teaches biology and A&P â can confidently bring AI into his classroom, using clear guardrails to support real learning and critical thinking, while giving students a strong starting point for success.
The story
A native of southern New Jersey, Young developed an early fascination with the natural world, including a passion for saltwater marshes. The diamondback terrapin was especially fascinating to him because its unique physiology allows it to thrive in an environment that fluctuates multiple times daily due to changing tides. The terrapin found its sweet spot in the brackish marsh, much like the one Young is finding with generative AI in the classroom.
To Young, the challenge of AI in the classroom aligns with a familiar trend.
âHigher education is slow to respond to social changes,â he says. âThereâs a new application out there, such as ChatGPT, and students are fast on it. Theyâre looking to see how they can get through content more easily. They start using it before we know itâs out there. That puts us in higher ed behind the eight-ball because we donât have the opportunity to get out ahead of that and say, âNo, this is how it can be used beneficially.ââ
Many of Youngâs students are heading into careers in healthcare delivery, such as nursing and exercise science. He sees the danger of AI providing students with shortcuts to finishing their work.
âTheyâve never thought about the question, theyâve never reviewed their notes, they never went back into their textbook or attempted to critically think about what the question is asking,â he says.
However, AIâs potential for overreach hasnât prompted Young to banish it. Quite the opposite.
âWeâre embracing it by putting up guardrails around what we want students to use it for,â says Young.
The approach resonates with students.
âTheyâre starting to see a more positive, healthy relationship with AI,â he says. âBecause theyâre seeing their instructor embracing it, theyâre seeing how it can be beneficial, and theyâre seeing how it can make them understand the concepts better. Theyâre starting to realize we can use this as a foundational tool thatâs going to allow for more conversations, more engagement, more review, more self-reflection.â
ĂŰĚŇapp pilot underscores student adoption of AI tool
For the Fall 2024 semester, Youngâs Anatomy & Physiology students participated in a pilot around the AI-Powered Study Tool. During the pilot, student usage of the chatbot available within the eTextbook was tracked.
The toolâs âExplainâ feature, which provides an AI-generated assist for breaking down concepts in the eTextbook, consistently ranked as the most used.
âA student says, âIâm having a hard time understanding action potential formation. Can you please explain this to me in a more detailed or concise way?â The chatbot will go into the section and re-explain it to the student in a different format or a different wording separate from what was used in the textbook, and possibly a little different from what I have, giving them a third voice in how to understand it.â
Young says thatâs a healthy, beneficial use of AI.
âTheyâre still doing the work, but it gives them a context,â he says. âIt opens engagement and dialogue with me. It flips the script to, âIâm a partner in your education. Iâm here to support you, and these are the tools weâre going to use.ââ
Students can compare the notes they take during lectures or while studying to the explanations provided by the bot to identify concepts they may have missed.
âTheyâre reviewing and studying those gaps without them really knowing theyâre doing it,â says Young. âThey can have a more in-depth understanding about a topic that perhaps they didnât realize they didnât understand. Thatâs a beneficial, healthy way of using this technology. Itâs taking all this content, and itâs giving them a starting point so that theyâre not so overwhelmed.â
At the end of each exam, Young includes a âwrapper,â a meta-cognitive survey that asks students to reflect on how well they feel they did, what they did to prepare for the exam, and what they could do differently moving forward.
âWhen we looked at what activity students were doing to engage with the content, I was surprised by how many were using the AI feature in ĂŰĚŇapp,â he says, âwhether itâs to summarize a diagram, create review questions that they can study from, summarize part of the text, or create an outline of key points.â
For Young, thatâs an AI win, and an exciting reason to continue its thoughtful adoption in the classroom.
âStudents are actively using it to identify gaps in their learning and understanding, and theyâre filling those gaps. Theyâre coming in less anxious; theyâre coming in with a better sense of what they know and donât know, and thatâs translating into higher success on exams.â
What Professor Youngâs students said about AI-Powered Study Tool from ĂŰĚŇapp*
95% of respondents agreed the AI tools were helpful for achieving their academic goals
95% of respondents agreed the AI tools helped them feel more confident handling complex topics or problems
95% of respondents agreed the AI tools helped them feel more prepared for class
*Fall 2024 AI-Powered Study Tool pilot survey. N=19
About the author

Patrick Golden
Patrick Golden is a writer, marketing and communications specialist, and former journalist based in Massachusetts.