How Grading the Chats Makes Learning Visible

Source: Mike Kentz Substack
Author: Mike Kentz
Original source: https://mikekentz.substack.com/p/how-grading-the-chats-makes-learning

Private backup: the full article text is archived in the private repository at archives/articles/mikekentz-substack-com-how-grading-the-chats-makes-learning.source.md. It is not published on the public Quartz site.

Summary

Mike Kentz presents “Grading the Chats” as the AI-era equivalent of “show your work.” Because AI can generate polished final products, he argues educators should assess the student’s process by examining how they prompt, question, evaluate, iterate, and refine during AI interactions. The article recommends designing large, ambiguous tasks, sharing model transcripts, giving process feedback, starting small, and having teachers first grade their own AI chats. Its central contribution is a process-based assessment model that treats AI chat transcripts as evidence of student thinking and AI literacy.

Big ideas

Claims

Key evidence and examples

  • The calculator analogy frames chat transcripts as the “show your work” equivalent for AI-assisted learning.
  • Kentz names process categories such as prompt writing, breaking down problems, response analysis, iteration, and refinement.
  • He recommends big, ambiguous tasks that AI cannot trivially complete and model transcripts that make successful interaction visible.
  • Teachers are encouraged to first grade their own AI interactions before grading students’ chats.

Education relevance

Very relevant for assessment redesign, AI literacy, writing instruction, project-based learning, academic integrity, and teacher professional development.

My notes