TY - JOUR
T1 - Nursing and midwifery students’ ethical views on the acceptability of using AI machine translation software to write university assignments
T2 - A deficit-oriented or translanguaging perspective?
AU - Grieve, Averil
AU - Rouhshad, Amir
AU - Petraki, Elpida
AU - Bechaz, Alan
AU - Dai, David Wei
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was partly funded by an Association for Academic Language and Learning Grant and a Monash University Advancing Women\u2019s Success Grant. These funding sources did not play any role in the design, data collection, analysis or interpretation of the data. They were not involved in the writing of this report or the decision to submit the article for publication.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors
PY - 2024/7
Y1 - 2024/7
N2 - This paper focuses on tertiary English as an additional language (EAL) students' ethical choices, and the factors impacting on them, when deciding whether to engage with artificially-intelligent (AI) machine translation (MT) tools for the writing of university assignments. It also investigates how student responses align with either deficit-oriented or translanguaging theoretical perspectives. Via semi-structured interviews, the voices of 23 EAL nursing and midwifery students indicate an array of ethical positions which are based on three key areas of consideration: 1) ownership of language and ideas; 2) fairness and respect; and 3) personal growth. The study highlights the scalar, strategic and dynamic nature of students’ ethical decisions and shows that questions of ethicality tap into individual, social and institutional constructs of fairness and respect, skills recognition, lifelong learning and language dominion. The findings also indicate that discussions of fairness should focus not only on differences between non-EAL and EAL students, but also inequalities within EAL cohorts. Student responses provide evidence of both deficit-oriented and translanguaging perspectives. The researchers call for universities to create clear policies concerning use of MT that recognise the levels of reflection that students engage in when writing their assignments and value the full linguistic repertoires that students bring to global educational settings.
AB - This paper focuses on tertiary English as an additional language (EAL) students' ethical choices, and the factors impacting on them, when deciding whether to engage with artificially-intelligent (AI) machine translation (MT) tools for the writing of university assignments. It also investigates how student responses align with either deficit-oriented or translanguaging theoretical perspectives. Via semi-structured interviews, the voices of 23 EAL nursing and midwifery students indicate an array of ethical positions which are based on three key areas of consideration: 1) ownership of language and ideas; 2) fairness and respect; and 3) personal growth. The study highlights the scalar, strategic and dynamic nature of students’ ethical decisions and shows that questions of ethicality tap into individual, social and institutional constructs of fairness and respect, skills recognition, lifelong learning and language dominion. The findings also indicate that discussions of fairness should focus not only on differences between non-EAL and EAL students, but also inequalities within EAL cohorts. Student responses provide evidence of both deficit-oriented and translanguaging perspectives. The researchers call for universities to create clear policies concerning use of MT that recognise the levels of reflection that students engage in when writing their assignments and value the full linguistic repertoires that students bring to global educational settings.
KW - Academic integrity
KW - Artificial intelligence
KW - EAL
KW - Machine translation
KW - Translanguaging
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85196627210
U2 - 10.1016/j.jeap.2024.101379
DO - 10.1016/j.jeap.2024.101379
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85196627210
SN - 1475-1585
VL - 70
JO - Journal of English for Academic Purposes
JF - Journal of English for Academic Purposes
M1 - 101379
ER -