I'm currently in college and I started school before AI really got "good". The currently available AI-detection software is not good, so its hard to prove that something was AI generated. But if you write horribly all semester in your basic assignments, and then your final paper looks like a PhD wrote it, they are gonna know.
At first, the AI policy was zero tolerance/cheating. Now, professors are realizing they can't stop it. Some are still zero-tolerance, others allow you to use it, but you must cite it, and others allow you to use it to generate ideas and suggestions.
Personally, I don't consider grammarly to be a true AI software. It doesn't think for itself, it doesn't generate it's own ideas, it just takes what you have written and words it in a more grammatically correct way.
At first, the AI policy was zero tolerance/cheating. Now, professors are realizing they can't stop it. Some are still zero-tolerance, others allow you to use it, but you must cite it, and others allow you to use it to generate ideas and suggestions.
Personally, I don't consider grammarly to be a true AI software. It doesn't think for itself, it doesn't generate it's own ideas, it just takes what you have written and words it in a more grammatically correct way.