Singing the blue book blues

Students across the educational spectrum are outsourcing their work to Artificial Intelligence (AI), according to The Wall Street Journal.  In other words, cheating is more widespread than ever. To counter this underhanded academic revolution, the professoriate is taking a page, or more appropriately, pages โ€“ from their analog days to solve an ongoing digital problem.

Enter blue books โ€“ the academyโ€™s counter to the AI revolution. Blue books first made their appearance at Butler University in Indiana a century ago and represent the schoolโ€™s colors of blue and white, leading to their time-honored name. In my salad days, the illustrious blue book was as much of the collegiate landscape as payphones, textbooks and typewriters. 

In a world shaped by algorithms, bureaucracies and nonstop social media, the blue book is a welcomed and needed blast from the past. They are a constructive, yet inexpensive tool that consists of blank ruled pages waiting to be filled with knowledge obtained.  In an era where computers and virtual schooling relegated the blue book to academiaโ€™s endangered list, its comeback solves a problem that didnโ€™t exist until now.

Blue books were a longtime staple of the academic exam world particularly for subjects requiring written analysis. While their use declined with the rise of digital technology, they have seen a resurgence in recent times due to concerns about academic integrity.

Blue books will help combat AI-assisted cheating, making it easier for students to generate essays and answers.  ChatGPT is perhaps the most formidable cheat apparatus to date. Over the past two summers with school out, ChatGPTโ€™s traffic has markedly declined. Moreover, ChatGPT references Wikipedia proving that all things digital are anything but a scholarly, peer reviewed provenance underscoring why it is called โ€œartificialโ€ intelligence. 

AI is anything but agnostic. AI is beholden to the bias of their programmers and their milquetoast drivel.  Programmingโ€™s oldest adage applies โ€“ garbage in, garbage out. AI doesnโ€™t think for you; it does other peopleโ€™s thinking for you.  Critical thinking skills are desperately needed in our era that is overwhelmed with an army of mendacious charlatans who ply lies for a living.

While this return to what was once considered a relic of the past helps prevent AI misappropriation in every sense. The triumphant return of blue books is part of a broader symposium about how to balance educational technology with genuine learning and critical thinking. They allow a student to demonstrate their knowledge in context and without digital assistance providing them with the opportunity to test their writing chops accompanied by the once common cursive penmanship that in recent times is greatly lacking. 

To call most penmanship today chicken scratch would be an insult to chickens. 

Such expression in their own words and in their own handwriting ensure academic integrity, while expressing the personality of the writer with a distinct human touch. 

Blue books are an antidote for that compounded equation infecting campuses known as dumbed down plus group think equals grade inflation.  Moreover, it is difficult to cheat on a handwritten, proctored exam.

Best of all itโ€™s working as some universities have seen a surge in demand, with blue book sales increasing by 30% at Texas A&M, 50% at the University of Florida, and 80% at UC Berkeley.

Adding an oral assessment component to the blue book exam is something that has been suggested to ensure the student can verbally communicate cohesively and effectively what they have learned.   

Teachers want their students to learn and succeed, not cheat their way to a diploma. Education is not just about gathering and regurgitating facts and figures. It is about critical thinking, analysis and creation.

Technology is a tool that makes life better, not a means to do your thinking for you. 

The brain must be exercised.

The lack of critical thinking is our other national deficit growing at unprecedented levels.

Too often collegiate critical thinking means undermining objective reality when it conflicts with studentsโ€™ emotions that are suffused nonstop with leftist ideology. 

Like it or not, life is one big blue book. 

Blue books are the first hopeful sign of common sense emerging from the academic quad in decades.  Proving whatโ€™s old is still useful.

Perhaps fountain pens, textbooks and slide rules are next.

Greg Maresca
Greg Maresca
Greg Maresca is a New York City native and U.S. Marine Corps veteran who writes for TTC. He resides in the Pennsylvania Coal Region. His work can also be found in The American Spectator, NewsBreak, Daily Item, Republican Herald, Standard Speaker, The Remnant Newspaper, Gettysburg Times, Daily Review, The News-Item, Standard Journal and more.

What are we to Defy on the Nationwide Day of Defiance?

The โ€œNo Kings Nationwide Day of Defianceโ€ is scheduled to take place during President Trumpโ€™s military parade to celebrate the U.S. Armyโ€™s 250th birthday.

7 Ways to be a Good Citizen

Good citizenship is vital to our nation for her to thrive and survive, because this nation is made up of a free people and weโ€™re responsible for our republic.

Walmart Boycott in Question Now

Walmart heiress Christy Walton called for protests against President Trump on June 14th and we the people called for a nation-wide boycott of Walmart.

MAGA Influencer Calls to Deploy Palantir on LA Streets

Federal govt. expanded partnership with surveillance behemoth Palantir to the tune by hundreds of millions of dollars in contracts across multiple agencies.

What These ICE Riots are REALLY All About

โ€œWhy have Democrats seemingly lost their minds, throwing their allegiance behind criminal illegal aliens over naturalized American citizens?โ€

Afghan Citizen Pleads Guilty to Planning Terror Attack on US Election Day

Afghan national pleaded guilty to offenses related to terrorism for plotting an attack in the US on Election Day, Nov. 5, 2024, the DOJ said in statement.

Minnesota Lawmaker, Husband Killed in โ€˜Targeted Shootingsโ€™; Another Lawmaker, Spouse Wounded

MN lawmaker and husband were fatally shot, and another lawmaker and wife were wounded in separate attacks described as โ€œtargeted political violence.โ€

America Prepares for Protests, Celebrations on Flag Day

President Trump's detractors are planning โ€œNo Kings Day of Defianceโ€ protests in an attempt to shift focus away from Trump's grand parade.

Missouri Governor Activates National Guard, Declares State of Emergency Over Possible Civil Unrest

Governor of Missouri declared a state of emergency and activated stateโ€™s National Guard over possible riots and protests following unrest in Los Angeles.

EPA Announces Funding to Reduce Lead in Drinking Water at Schools

EPA is setting aside $26 million in funding for U.S. states and territories to tackle issue of lead in drinking water in schools and childcare facilities.

Meet the New Members of the CDCโ€™s Vaccine Advisory Committee

The new members of the CDCโ€™s Vaccine Advisory Committee appointed by RFK, Jr. includes an inventor, a Catholic nurse, and a former committee member.

Trump Hints at an Executive Order to Address Illegal Immigrant Farmworkers

President Trump says he'll issue an order to address illegal farm and hotel workers as protests against immigration enforcement efforts spread nationwide.

Senate Confirms Billy Long to Head IRS

The U.S. Senate has confirmed that William โ€œBillyโ€ Long, a former Missouri congressman, will serve as IRS commissioner.
spot_img

Related Articles