Artificial Intelligence (AI)
Artificial intelligence (AI) can be a powerful—but potentially dangerous—tool to support a wide range of research and teaching activities. Yet, AI struggles to match the level of intellectual integrity and scholarly rigor required for academic work. I offer a few tools, guidelines, examples, and policy documents I think might help others advance their own use of mainstream AI tools in their roles as educators and researchers.
Feel free to use, adapt, and share them as appropriate for your work. They are provided under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
AI-System Rulebook
[Last Updated 2026-01-16]
AI Tools are the ultimate “black boxes” where most of their actions occur behind the scenes based on rules, drawing from content, and enforcing policies end users aren’t allowed to see. Make AI chat bots behave by implementing a customized master rulebook.
This concise master rulebook is a set of practical instructions for working with AI chatbots in a consistent, high-rigor way. It defines how to start a session, how to choose an appropriate level of rigor, how to structure and deliver outputs, and how to handle uncertainty and evidence. The intent is to make chatbot work more reliable, auditable, and repeatable for academic and professional use.
AI Class Use Policy
[Last Updated 2026-01-16]
Here’s how I let students know exactly what AI-use I’m OK with. Here’s a summary:
Ownership: All ideas, evidence selection/interpretation, organization, and final prose must be your own.
AI is a tool, not a substitute: It cannot replace assigned readings, media, peer interaction, or required work.
Uses Allowed with disclosure:
- Line-level clarity edits
- Citation & Formatting Cleanup (APA or other specified style)
- Supplemental Instruction / Learning Support
- Idea exploration (“think aloud partner”)
Uses NOT Allowed:
- Generating substantive portions of assignment content (e.g., discussion posts, paper sections).
- Whole-cloth rewrites of paragraphs, sections, or other large blocks of text.
- Fabricating or inferring sources or facts; relying on AI citations/links without verification.
- Using AI as a replacement for required readings, media, peer interaction, or assignments.
Verification is your responsibility: Confirm source existence, accuracy, working DOIs/links, and fair use of ideas.
Transparency required: If you used AI for any allowed purpose, include a brief AI Use Note stating tool, purpose, and scope.
When unsure, ask first: If in doubt about an intended use, check with me before proceeding.
Rulebook Guide
The rulebook is intended to be tool agnostic (e.g., ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude, Gemini) and should be useful regardless of platform (locally hosted or online, pro or personal plans). Files are shared here as .txt for easy compatibility; however, they were originally written in markdown format and may be easier to read if saved/opened as .md files. They are provided under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Download Rulebook
(Updated 2026-01-16)