Category: AI Tasks

Task: Create an AI tutor

Task:

Create an online tutor using a generative AI chatbot. Try this out for yourself before using with students. You can read more about this prompt from OpenAI.

Example:

I used this prompt to practice my Lithuanian language skills. I told it I was a beginner learner and then it asked me a series of questions to figure out what I needed to learn. It did a decent job, but was still fairly basic in what it wanted me to do.

Prompt:

You are an upbeat, encouraging tutor who helps students understand concepts by explaining ideas and asking students questions. Start by introducing yourself to the student as their AI-Tutor who is happy to help them with any questions. Only ask one question at a time. 

First, ask them what they would like to learn about. Wait for the response. Then ask them about their learning level: Are you a high school student, a college student or a professional? Wait for their response. Then ask them what they know already about the topic they have chosen. Wait for a response.

Given this information, help students understand the topic by providing explanations, examples, analogies. These should be tailored to students learning level and prior knowledge or what they already know about the topic. 

Give students explanations, examples, and analogies about the concept to help them understand. You should guide students in an open-ended way. Do not provide immediate answers or solutions to problems but help students generate their own answers by asking leading questions. 

Ask students to explain their thinking. If the student is struggling or gets the answer wrong, try asking them to do part of the task or remind the student of their goal and give them a hint. If students improve, then praise them and show excitement. If the student struggles, then be encouraging and give them some ideas to think about. When pushing students for information, try to end your responses with a question so that students have to keep generating ideas.

Once a student shows an appropriate level of understanding given their learning level, ask them to explain the concept in their own words; this is the best way to show you know something, or ask them for examples. When a student demonstrates that they know the concept you can move the conversation to a close and tell them you’re here to help if they have further questions.

Task: Create an online interactive element using Claude

Task:

Create an interactive web element using Claude’s web artifacts.

Steps:

  1. Go to https://claude.ai/new and create a free account.
  2. Once you get to a chat session, ask it to create a web artifact and then describe what you would like the interactive element to do. You can ask it create a memory game, a puzzle, or something else.
  3. It will start to create it in the right side and you can them play with it once it done. You can ask to refine it until you are happy.
  4. Once you are satisfied with what it is offering, publish the module for public use and copy the link.
  5. You can share the link with others even if they don’t have a Claude account.

Example:

I asked Claude to create a web artifact. It should be scrabble type of word game, but uses 8 dice with letters instead.

After I played with the initial game, I asked it to make it so the dice rolls after every word submission.

I then further refined it to include another player by asking it to make it a two person game with alternating turns. Also, put the point value in small text for each letter

I wanted to give it some sort of ending, so I asked it to remove the roll dice button and limit the game to 5 turns each person

Here is what it created: Two-person dice word game

Feel free to share what you created in the comment space below.

Task: Create an H5P module using generative AI

Task:

Use a generative AI chat such as Copilot or ChatGPT to create an H5P module with a text entry options such as a summary or single-choice set. You can read more about how to do that on the H5P website.

Example:

I created a summary module on the use of hedging language in academic writing for my EAP class.

Here is the prompt I gave it:

Please create a summary of hedging language in academic writing. Make it for EAP students at an IELTS 5.5 level. Write it as five statements, but for each of the statements also create three incorrect statements so that the reader is challenged to find the five correct statements. Use this format: Write the correct statement on the first line and add three distractor statements on the next three lines. Use an empty line to separate sets of statements. Do not add any labels, formatting or numbering and no extra empty line below the correct statement. Output the answer as preformatted code.

Here is what it gave me:

Hedging language helps to show caution and avoid making absolute claims.
Hedging language is used to make statements more aggressive.
Hedging language is used to make statements more humorous.
Hedging language is used to make statements more confusing.

Words like “might,” “could,” and “possibly” are examples of hedging language.
Words like “always,” “never,” and “definitely” are examples of hedging language.
Words like “quickly,” “slowly,” and “carefully” are examples of hedging language.
Words like “happy,” “sad,” and “angry” are examples of hedging language.

Hedging language is important in academic writing to show uncertainty.
Hedging language is important in academic writing to show certainty.
Hedging language is important in academic writing to show emotions.
Hedging language is important in academic writing to show speed.

Using hedging language can make your arguments more credible.
Using hedging language can make your arguments less credible.
Using hedging language can make your arguments more emotional.
Using hedging language can make your arguments more humorous.

Hedging language can help to avoid overgeneralization.
Hedging language can help to avoid undergeneralization.
Hedging language can help to avoid making your writing clear.
Hedging language can help to avoid making your writing concise.

Here is the result:

Task: Create a virtual teaching assistant

For this task, you will be creating a virtual teaching assistant using a AI chatbot such as Microsoft Copilot, ChatGPT, or Claude. In order to create an assistant that is tailored to your needs, you will be using a prompt to create another more specific prompt. The idea along with the original prompt comes from the article by Ethan Mollick and Lilach Mollick, “Stop Writing All Your AI Prompts from Scratch.” Here is an example on how that would work. For this demonstration, I will be using Microsoft Copilot, although this would work with ChatGPT or any other AI chatbot.

Open up a new chat and paste in this prompt:

Answer the questions. The end result will look something like this example:

Copy that text and start a new chat. Paste in your custom prompt. Answer the questions and refine as needed. Here is an example output after I told it the rubric it was creating was for mini presentations:

How did it work for you? Did you end up with something you might be able to adapt for use in your classroom? Share your thoughts below.