Advanced Expository Writing: Writing and Artificial Intelligence
Harvard Extension School
EXPO E-44
Section 1
CRN 17319
As generative artificial intelligence (AI) becomes ubiquitous in our search engines, email, social media, and word processing systems, it is important to understand how the output of large language models (LLMs) differ from that of human communicators, as well as understanding the harms they might produce. This course explores AI through the disciplines of rhetoric and ethics, analyzing definitions, testing claims and evidence, considering social and ethical effects, and developing policy arguments. Students study issues of copyright and intellectual property, bias and fairness, security, sustainability, and transparency in AI systems, and apply them to case studies. Students also work on teams to perform an ethical analysis of an AI system for a specific use case, and they learn to analyze the output of generative AI systems in terms of rhetorical situation, genre, discourse, audience awareness, and information design. Readings are drawn from leaders in the field of AI, scholars in the ethics of technology, and rhetoricians.
Registration Closes: August 28, 2025
Credits: 4
View Tuition Information Term
Fall Term 2025
Part of Term
Full Term
Format
Live Attendance Web Conference
Credit Status
Graduate, Undergraduate
Section Status
Open