The debate is raging in faculty lounges across the globe: Is ChatGPT creating a generation of “Cognitive Slackers”? Recent 2026 studies suggest that over-reliance on AI leads to “Mechanized Convergence”—where student outputs become less diverse and less critical.
To fight this, we need to move from Product-Based Grading to Process-Based Assessment. Here is your 2026 guide to creating homework that is functionally “AI-Resistant.”
1. The “Hyper-Local” Constraint
AI is trained on the global internet, but it hasn’t sat in your Tuesday morning 2nd-period class.
- The Strategy: Require students to reference a specific “In-Class Discourse” or a “Local Community Event.”
- The Prompt Shift:
- Instead of: “Analyze the causes of the American Civil War.”
- Use: “Apply our Tuesday class debate regarding ‘States’ Rights’ to the specific statue controversy currently happening in our downtown square.”
2. Mandatory “Version History” & Scaffolding
In 2026, grading a “Final PDF” is like grading a magician on their trick without seeing the rehearsals.
- The Strategy: Grade the Scaffolding, not just the summit. Use tools like Google Docs Version History or Brisk Teaching to verify the “Human-in-the-loop” writing process.
- The Workflow:
- Week 1: Handwritten Brainstorming & Research Question.
- Week 2: Annotated Bibliography (with a requirement for 1 physical book/interview).
- Week 3: First Draft + “AI Reflection Memo” (explaining how they used AI to refine their ideas).
- Week 4: Final Submission.
3. The “Video Viva Voce” (The Oral Defense)
If a student can’t explain their 1,500-word essay in a 60-second video, they didn’t write it.
- The Strategy: Use Flip (formerly Flipgrid) or Canvas Studio for a “One-Minute Defense.”
- The Requirement: Students must answer one “Pivot Question” on video: “If you had to argue the exact opposite of your thesis, what would your strongest point be?” This requires the high-level synthesis that “lazy” AI-copying skips.
4. “Buggy AI” Critique
Instead of banning AI, make the homework about finding its flaws. * The Strategy: Give the students an AI-generated response that is 80% correct but contains 2-3 subtle “Hallucinations” or logical fallacies.
- The Task: “Find the 3 errors the AI made in this physics proof and rewrite the correct solution by hand.”
Comparison: Vulnerable vs. Resistant Tasks
| Task Type | AI Vulnerability | Why it Fails | The “AI-Resistant” Alternative |
| Summarization | High | AI is a “Summary Machine.” | Critique: Identify 2 biases in this text. |
| Standard Essay | High | Predictable structure. | Portfolio: Show 3 drafts of evolution. |
| Math Drill | High | Photomath/Calculators. | Error Analysis: Find why this ‘bad’ code failed. |
| General Q&A | High | Searchable facts. | Hyper-Local: Interview a local business owner. |
The TWH Skills “PEACE” Framework for 2026
When designing any new assignment, ask if it hits these five pillars (Saucier, 2025):
- Preparation: Does it require pre-work that AI can’t see?
- Expertise: Does it build a specific, niche skill?
- Authenticity: Is this a real-world task?
- Care: Does the student have a personal stake in the outcome?
- Engagement: Does it involve human-to-human interaction?

