Which course? Discourse! Teaching Discourse and Generation in the Era of LLMs
This addresses the problem of bridging sub-disciplines in NLP education for undergraduate students, but it is incremental as it focuses on curriculum design rather than advancing computational methods.
The paper tackles the challenge of designing educational courses that integrate discourse processing with natural language generation in NLP, presenting a new undergraduate course that was offered in Fall 2025 and evaluated through a survey.
The field of NLP has undergone vast, continuous transformations over the past few years, sparking debates going beyond discipline boundaries. This begs important questions in education: how do we design courses that bridge sub-disciplines in this shifting landscape? This paper explores this question from the angle of discourse processing, an area with rich linguistic insights and computational models for the intentional, attentional, and coherence structure of language. Discourse is highly relevant for open-ended or long-form text generation, yet this connection is under-explored in existing undergraduate curricula. We present a new course, "Computational Discourse and Natural Language Generation". The course is collaboratively designed by a team with complementary expertise and was offered for the first time in Fall 2025 as an upper-level undergraduate course, cross-listed between Linguistics and Computer Science. Our philosophy is to deeply integrate the theoretical and empirical aspects, and create an exploratory mindset inside the classroom and in the assignments. This paper describes the course in detail and concludes with takeaways from an independent survey as well as our vision for future directions.