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Statement on Our Generative A.I. Use

Generative A.I. tools were used in the creation of this book, primarily for brainstorming ideas, providing definitions, and, as mentioned previously in our Accessibility Statement, producing images. In line with the Committee on Publication Ethics position statement on the use of generative A.I. in manuscript preparation, we’ve listed a few detailed examples on how gen A.I. was used.

Example 1.

Prompt to Claude 3.5 Sonnet: “We were hoping to build a very simple glossary of generative a.i. terms for university faculty members new to these technologies. We’d like to include LLM, hallucination, at least, but maybe we can brainstorm some others together? We’d like to cap it at 25 or so terms.”

Claude replied with 25 terms, of which we kept chatbot, fine-tuning, Generative A.I., GPT (Generative Pre-trained Transformer), Natural Language Processing (NLP), prompt, and training data. After further prompting, Claude generated one-sentence definitions of these terms, which we verified, revised, and made more robust.

Example 2.

Prompt to Canva’s Magic Media: “university student sitting at a computer prompting generative A.I.”

Magic Media produced a number of images, some of which are shown below.

university student sitting at a computer prompting generative ai university student sitting at a computer prompting generative ai university student sitting at a computer prompting generative ai

Example 3.

Prompt to Claude 3.5 Sonnet: “What are the top risks and limitations to using generative AI?”

Claude replied with a list ten items, nine of which we already had on a list. The tenth item, “the risk of over-relying on A.I.-generated content without critical evaluation” inspired us to include a reflective exercise in our Limitations and Risks chapter. The list concluded with the sentence, “These risks and limitations highlight the need for careful consideration and responsible implementation of generative AI technologies.” We followed up with this prompt:

Prompt to Claude 3.5 Sonnet: “Can you say more about ‘These risks and limitations highlight the need for careful consideration and responsible implementation of generative AI technologies’?”

Claude replied with a “a more comprehensive explanation” whereby it grouped the previous list of risks and limitations into broader categories, for example, “Transparency and accountability” and “Legal and regulatory considerations.” We skimmed the output, but didn’t do anything with it nor continue the interaction with the A.I.

Example 4.

Prompt to Claude 3.5 Sonnet: “We’d like to explore the idea of faculty using gen A.I. to design assessments. If I gave you a learning outcome, could you design three similar assessments—one that is vulnerable to having students use A.I. to complete it, one that might mitigate A.I. use, and one that requires students A.I. for part of the assignment?”

Claude used the learning outcome, to “analyze the impact of different leadership styles on employee motivation and productivity in diverse organizational settings” and developed three assignments:

  • a standard essay assignment with a general prompt (i.e., “Write a 1500-word essay analyzing the impact of different leadership styles on employee motivation and productivity…)
  • an assignment involving the interview of a classmate, personal reflection, and in-class presentation (i.e., “Interview a classmate about their personal experience with different leadership styles…)
  • an assignment that requires students to use A.I. and critically evaluate its output (i.e., “Use a generative AI tool to produce a 500-word analysis…)

These three assignments, although revised from the original Claude output, are used as examples in the Examples of Assessment Designs chapter of this book—both in how instructors could use generative A.I. for lesson planning and assessment design, but also how assignments can be adjusted to account for individual instructors’ comfort levels and preferences around student gen A.I. use.

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Generative Artificial Intelligence in Teaching and Learning Copyright © 2025 by abbedrosezqi5 and Dalhousie University Centre for Learning and Teaching is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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