The rise of misinformation is a huge concern for all of us, and GENAI adds a particularly troubling twist. How do we prepare to live in a world where we can’t accept much at face value? This “mechanization of disinformation” is yet another aspect of GENAI we need to investigate. In the activity, students have […]
Item Type: Assignment/Project
It’s not live, it’s Memorex AI
GENAI tools are increasingly being used to generate images, audio, and even video of real people (doing and saying things they’ve never actually done). As this technology improves, what does that mean for our understanding of what is real and what is not? How do we prepare ourselves to navigate a world in which the […]
It’s not art, it’s data
This activity looks specifically at AI tools for generating images. Students will learn about the possibility of bias to infiltrate the outputs of these tools. They’ll also use a GENAI image tool to build and then transform an image through prompts.
It’s not friendship, it’s programming
Explore how GENAI interacts with humans, often making us feel as though the tool has a “personality.” How does this impact our impressions of GENAI and what we expect from it? Why might we need to resist the urge to think of GENAI anthropomorphically? In the activity, students can engage with a particular GENAI tool […]
It’s not magic, it’s math
Explore the core interaction of generative AI: prompt generation. Prompt engineering is defined as “the process of structuring text that can be interpreted and understood by a generative AI model.” In this activity, students explore prompt-generation through the writing of a poem with GENAI assistance.
Role-Play
Ask AI to play the role of a character/historical figure or to develop role-play scenarios for class. Image: Midjourney, “role-play –no person”
Creative Writing/Brainstorming
Use AI to write a pitch for a TV show, create or refine a script, or help with product development/marketing. Imagine: Midjounrey “brainstorm –no person”
Critiques of AI-Generated Content
Provide students with prompts and then have them critique/revise the output, looking for inaccuracies, bias, etc. Imagine: Midjourney “critique –no person”
Intentional Misuse
We can think of intentional misuse as an “ethical hacking” approach where students misuse AI in order to expose shortcomings and threats. Image: Midjourney “misuse –no person”
Rewriting with AI Image Generators
Students use AI image- generation tools such as DALL·E to create images based on their writing, particularly memoirs. Image: Midjourney “Image Generator”