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Sports Briefs

Women’s Basketball

The women’s basketball team earned a decisive 76–47 win against Seattle Pacific Thursday night. SFU held Seattle to only 20 points in the first half, and improved their record to 6–6 overall. Ellen Kemp led the Clan with 23 points, and Rachel Fradgley led the team with nine rebounds. Their next game is this Tuesday against Western Washington.

Wrestling

SFU won one of four duels at the Tracy Borah Duals in Gunnison, Colorado. The Clan lost their duels to Colorado Mesa, University of Central Oklahoma, and Western Colorado State, but won their duel against Colorado State University. Redshirt Sophomore Morgan Smith had a strong day, winning all four of his matches.

Cross Country

Tommy Gallagher of Keswick, Ontario has signed his national letter of intent to compete for the Track and Field team next fall. Tommy is a top middle distance runner, finishing 13th in the 1,500 at the 2015 Canadian Youth Track and Field Championships.

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The AI gender gap should not be mischaracterized as a skill issue

By: Heidi Kwok, Staff Writer “Raise your hand if you use AI regularly in some capacity.” The atmosphere in the classroom instantly tensed — was this seemingly harmless question actually a trap set out by our professor to weed out the academic non-believers? After what felt like minutes, several hands reluctantly shot up. Alarmingly, most of them were from the students who identified as men. Thankfully, the impromptu questionnaire did not lead to a bunch of failing grades and the lecture went forward as usual.  However, it underscored a more pressing issue with artificial intelligence (AI) use: research shows that men are more likely to adopt generative AI tools such as ChatGPT in professional settings than women. This staggering imbalance contributes to the pre-existent workplace gender...

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By: Heidi Kwok, Staff Writer “Raise your hand if you use AI regularly in some capacity.” The atmosphere in the classroom instantly tensed — was this seemingly harmless question actually a trap set out by our professor to weed out the academic non-believers? After what felt like minutes, several hands reluctantly shot up. Alarmingly, most of them were from the students who identified as men. Thankfully, the impromptu questionnaire did not lead to a bunch of failing grades and the lecture went forward as usual.  However, it underscored a more pressing issue with artificial intelligence (AI) use: research shows that men are more likely to adopt generative AI tools such as ChatGPT in professional settings than women. This staggering imbalance contributes to the pre-existent workplace gender...

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