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ChatGPT successfully passed the final exam in one of the best business schools in the world.

Published: 2023-01-23

While OpenAI's ChatGPT AI bot has raised concerns among high school teachers for its potential use in assignments, the problem is not limited to high schools. Christian Terwiesch, a professor at the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania, said that ChatGPT passed the final exam in the core course of the MBA Operations Management program with no problems.


School graduates who have completed the MBA (Master of Business Administration) program work as middle or senior managers in business, in the state or municipal service.


The professor noted that the AI bot "is amazing at basic operations management and process analysis questions, including those based on case studies," adding that there were also problems when answering "more complex process analysis questions."


However, according to the teacher, in the end, ChatGPT "would have received a grade from B to B- on the exam." Although this is not the highest score, it is a passing one, and the exam is considered passed.


The professor also said that the AI bot "has performed well in preparing legal documents, and some believe that the next generation of this technology may even pass the bar exam."


Billionaire entrepreneur Mark Cuban noted that ChatGPT is "just in its infancy." “Imagine what a 10th generation GPT would look like,” he added.


Andrew Karolyi, dean of the SC Johnson College of Business at Cornell University, agrees, telling the Financial Times this week: “We all know for a fact that ChatGPT is here to stay. If anything, these AI technologies will keep getting better and better. Faculty and university leaders need to invest in education.”


“I believe that AI will not replace humans, but people who use AI are going to replace humans,” Kara McWilliams, head of ETS Product Innovation Labs, who developed a tool to detect the use of AI in responses, told the Financial Times.


Tervish noted the impact that electronic calculators had and suggested that something similar could happen with solutions like ChatGPT.


“Before the advent of calculators and other computing devices, many firms employed hundreds of employees whose task was to manually perform mathematical operations, such as multiplying or transforming matrices,” Tervish wrote in the study. “Obviously, such tasks are now automated, and the value of the skills associated with them has dropped dramatically. Likewise, any automation of the skills taught in our MBA programs has the potential to reduce the value of education.”