Rutt, Andrew

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Andrew Rutt has taught English Composition at John Cabot University since 2012. He has a B.A. in Fine Art and Critical Theory from Goldsmith's College, University of London and an M.A. from the Open University. The title of his thesis was: A Violent Grace: Freedom and Redemption in the Sophoclean Narrative of Flannery O’Connor. Co-author of the university textbook The UK: Learning the Language, Studying the Culture. Professor Rutt and his wife, Elena Buia are a translating duo and work collaboratively on texts from and into Italian and English, most recently translating Flannery O’Connor’s Prayer Journal for Rizzoli.

Publication Search Results

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  • Publication
    A Liberal Arts Guide to Academic Writing in the Age of AI: Crafting Meaning, Empowering Students. Making the Most of Artificial Intelligence Tools to Enhance the Liberal Arts Approach in Academic Writing
    (2024) Campbell, Christin; Keenan-Thomson, Tara; Lindo, Theresa; Romano, Nicoletta; Rutt, Andrew
    The advent of generative Artificial Intelligence (genAI) and large language models (LLMs) will require a sea change in how and what we teach students of all levels. Research strongly suggests that most university students are regularly using it in our courses, so it is incumbent on us to establish norms and best practices in our classes regarding AI use, ethics, and literacy. This strengthening guide provides modular lesson plans for an advanced university-level English Composition course that focuses on the teaching of critical reading and writing as well as information literacy. This guide provides: • practical lessons that address genAI and LLMs and its interaction with Liberal Arts approaches to teaching and learning; • genAI tools to use and suggestions about when to use them in class; and • assignments and assessment rubrics. We argue that the appropriate response to advancements in these technologies lies in the foregrounding of the liberal arts approach and the direct use and exploration of these new tools to enhance that perspective. This requires a shift in teaching that moves from product to process and focuses on critical reading and writing in shorter collaborative bursts that build toward a final written project rather than production of full-length assigned papers to be completed by students at home on their own. This guide was written by an interdisciplinary team of instructors and reference and instruction library professionals at John Cabot University in Rome, Italy. The project was completed in partnership with Parami University through the Open Society University Network and supported in part by a grant from the Open Society Foundations.