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Futurism

College Students Consumed by "Resignation and Despair" as They're Relentlessly Pressured to Use AI Student Reading Ability Spikes After Removing Tech From Class Prime Minister of the UK Vows to Unleash AI Tutors on 450,000 Poor Children College Students Are Rapidly Losing the Ability to Read College Professors Say Incoming Students No Longer Understand Middle School Math and Science Major Teachers Union Pleads With Elementary Schools to Stop Giving Young Kids AI Take-No-Prisoners Professor Will Fail Any Student Who Uses AI Parents Explode in Fury at School’s Plan to Constantly Film Their Children to Train AI Grade Inflation Is Going Nuts as Every Student Is Basically Submitting the Same Essay Trump Says a New Drug Can Bring Dead People Back to Life A Major Paper Claiming AI Is Good for Students Just Got Retracted, Which Is Very Bad News for Advocates of AI in the Classroom Bosses Horrified as “AI Native” College Graduates Hit the Workplace Huge Analysis Finds That the Average Person Is Getting Absolutely Hosed on Polymarket AI-Powered High School Scrapped After Protests Erupt Against It Usually, Young People Embrace New Technology. Gen Z’s Attitude Toward AI Should Worry the Entire Tech Industry Psychological Research Finds Trump Supporters Are Not Doing Well College Students Losing Ability to Participate in Class Discussions Due to Offloading Their Thinking to AI
AI Forces College Professor to Get Typewriters for Entire Class
2026-04-04 · via Futurism

Hands typing on a vintage typewriter with a blank sheet of paper, shown from above. The image has a pop art style with the typewriter and hands in purple and the background in bright yellow with a green grid pattern.

Illustration by Tag Hartman-Simkins / Futurism. Source: Getty Images

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Meme wisdom holds that modern problems require modern solutions, but what peddlers of this internet adage failed to consider is that an antiquated and possibly impractical approach could be loads more fun.

We present Grit Matthias Phelps, a German language instructor at Cornell University who’s rebelling against a world gone mad with AI fever and pervasive brainrot by compelling students to use typewriters in class, the Associated Press reports.

It’s an exercise she only conducts once a semester, but seems to leave a lasting impression on her pupils. Suddenly, they’re forced to depend not on screens, but on themselves and their classmates. The closest thing they hear to an attention-span destroying notification is the ding of the typewriter bell letting them know that they only have a few characters left on a line.

“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,” computer science major Ratchaphon Lertdamrongwong, a sophomore, told the AP.

“While writing the essay, I had to talk a lot more, socialize a lot more, which I guess was normal back then,” Lertdamrongwong added, referring to when typewriters were the norm. “But it’s drastically different from how we interact within the classroom in modern times. People are always on a laptop, always on the phone.”

Phelps said she began the exercise in the spring of 2023 after becoming frustrated with students using AI and online translation tools to complete 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?” Phelps told the AP.

She scrounged together some typewriters she thrifted and started including an “analog” assignment in her course syllabus; the purpose was to give students an idea of what learning was like before digital tech.

It’s not a widely applicable blueprint for tackling AI’s intrusion into education, but it does evince a broader trend of how schools and colleges are reverting to more analog practices to subvert it. Some intructors now favor administering oral exams and requiring handwritten notes. Word documents are being traded for blue book essays composed in class. Meanwhile, more high schools are experimenting with banning phones during school hours.

“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,” Lertdamrongwong told the AP.

Catherine Mong, a freshman in Phelps’ Intro to German class, called the assignment of typing a poem “fun and challenging.” She experimented using the typewriter to write fragmented poetry in the style of mid 20th century poet e e cummings.

“I’m probably going to hang them on my wall,” Mong said, proudly. “I’m kind of fascinated by typewriters. I told all my friends, I did a German test on a typewriter!”

The most brutal lesson, however, was a physical one: most of the students learned that their feeble fingers weren’t strong enough to touch-type on the stiff contraptions.

More on AI: Students Renting Smart Glasses to Cheat on Tests