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Ace Your Mindset​ Newsletter
Easy Study and Life Hacks

Guiding Your Student to Use ChatGPT to Aid Critical Thinking

8/30/2023

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Teenage girl writing at desk
Photo by Bruce Matsunaga

Leveraging AI Chatbots to Support Problem Solving Skills

According to American psychologist and philosopher John Dewey, “A society which wants to create and maintain a free and democratic social system must create responsible independence of thought among its young.” Innovation, reasoning, and personal expression are prized characteristics of contemporary culture which are ideally integrated into educational practice. 

Adults can do much to encourage learners to view academic projects as platforms for meaningful reflection, theorizing, and self-expression. Essays and projects can give voice to who students are, what they think, and how they feel. 

If AI chatbots are here to stay, is critical thinking for neurodivergent students at risk?

In a previous article, we provide an overview of some risks associated with using AI writers for school assignments, as well as guidelines on how to leverage them effectively as learning tools.

In a follow-up article on how to use AI text generators for research, we mention specific ways coaches and mentors can guide students who are embarking on AI-assisted academic projects.

Today, we explore the importance of helping students preserve a beneficial level of cognitive challenge, vet reference content for quality, incorporate their unique perspectives into writing assignments, and enhance their problem-solving skills while utilizing AI content generators. 

No effort = no learning

In his Psychology Today article on the sweet spot for optimum learning, neuroscientist Stanislas Dehaene asserts, “A passive organism learns almost nothing, because learning requires an active generation of hypotheses, with motivation and curiosity.”

Prioritizing effort and grit may feel counterintuitive to neurodivergent students. They may struggle with ADHD, autism spectrum disorder, or other learning differences that hamper executive functioning and lead to decision fatigue. However, the right amount of cognitive struggle helps them access peak learning. 

AI content writers passing as college students 

In a UCLA study, psychologists concluded that although its ability to solve problems contains some limitations, ChatGPT’s abstract reasoning performs comparably to that of undergraduate students on standardized tests and intelligence assessments. 

Rising Harvard sophomore Maya Bodnick conducted her own research, revealing ChatGPT’s ability to take her freshman year classes, write its own essays, and satisfy her professors’ standards enough to achieve a GPA of 3.3. “I basically found that ChatGPT is a college-level writer.” In Bodnick’s test, it did well with both formulaic and creative content, but failed where it had not been trained to provide a very specific answer. 

The hazards of outsourcing effort

Setting aside the ethics of “cheating,” if a task is too easy, students don’t grow. If it feels too difficult, they become overwhelmed and may give up. Stepping outside their comfort zones and applying reasonable effort to assignments, including risk taking and reworking an approach after failure, allows students opportunities to rehearse and refine cognitive skills.

Stressed learners may feel tempted to submit the immediate AI output verbatim, or at the very least, assume that it is good enough to paraphrase. The smooth content produced by AI tools may look great at first glance, and students may not recognize that initial responses always require analysis and revision. They also may not recognize how academic shortcuts will cause them harm.  

Don’t let your learner circumvent opportunities to grapple with challenging problems 

Academic skill building occurs when we don’t immediately know the answer, but arrive at new insight through manageable levels of effort. The impulse to lessen mental exertion in service of mere achievement is a strategy that will backfire when studentd face similar hurdles in the future. 

Relying on AI to do the heavy lifting bypasses students’ critical thinking. It robs them of an opportunity to build reasoning skills that will aid them in embracing challenge. Furthermore, part of critical thinking is recognizing when a source may be biased or inaccurate.

Just because it comes from a machine doesn’t make the output high quality or factual  

Travel writer Cameron Hewitt tested ChatGPT’s competence at generating a guidebook listing for Hillsborough Castle in Northern Ireland, offering the chatbot several chances to refine its output. Hewitt then compared the results with his own listing. 

He concluded that the AI generated text was lacking in personality, full of cliches, and reminiscent of advertising copy. “Even though I gave it feedback to tone down the promotional tone, the AI couldn’t resist making its listing sound like a commercial for Hillsborough Castle…It’s not surprising that AI defaults to a less nuanced, more actively promotional approach — because the vast majority of travel content out there is exactly that.” 

Cameron also noted that ChatGPT incorporated outdated details into its guidebook listing, including out-of- date ticket prices and references to a living Queen Elizabeth. 

Students using AI chatbots also encounter incorrect and distorted search results, but without the benefit of adult reasoning and fully developed executive functioning. 

Inaccuracy, bias, and quality control proficiency

Along with the aforementioned hazards of bypassing a healthy cognitive struggle, students face additional risks when relying on the authority of skewed or nonfactual content from AI text generators:  

  • They may not employ analysis of the output they receive. 
  • They may not leverage research skills to vet content for quality, fact check for accuracy, or use authoritative sources for verification.
  • They may not bring sufficiently developed perspective to a subject or its context to recognize incorrect or biased information. 

While learners may inadvertently trust faulty ideas and incorporate them into final drafts, educators can teach students to employ healthy skepticism, understand media bias, and evaluate their sources. 

Your student as meaning generator

As navigators of the digital age, neurodiverse learners need to be guided in discerning the highest quality and most personally relevant ideas to include in academic projects.

Nothing can replace a student’s own opinion, perspective, and voice. These cannot be outsourced to an AI bot. Active learning occurs when a student generates meaning by synthesizing existing knowledge and constructing a unique frame to an academic inquiry. If their critical reasoning skills go untested, they can easily develop the belief that they are not capable. 

AI text writers are handy for scraping the internet for factoids and providing inspiration. However, students need to scour their own memory banks and weave in what is relevant. 

Educators can empower students by supporting them through problem-solving hurdles, which will foster in them the confidence needed to create solutions to life’s future challenges. 

How can students leverage AI tools while maintaining optimum levels of rumination, scrutiny, and deduction in academic projects?

Solutions and Tips: Coaches and educators must help students understand how to use AI tools such as ChatGPT to aid, rather than replace critical thinking. 

  • Teach students to use discernment in vetting all types of prose for veracity and cultural bias, including identifying the sources’ credibility, affiliations, and agendas. 
 
  • Before they begin using an AI chatbot, help students pinpoint the priorities of their research, such as which facets of a topic they consider most relevant and of greatest value in light of their personal experience and observations.
 
  • Guide students to view AI writing generators as research tools, not writing prescriptives. Emphasize that initial chatbot output is a starting point and is not a reliable authority on any topic. 
 
  • Help learners convert academic prompts into meaningful research inquiries. 
 
  • Encourage students to apply their vetting skills in analyzing output from AI writers, recognizing relevant portions, and weeding out inaccuracies and slanted perspectives.
 
  • Teach learners to craft iterative queries and effective follow-up questions, incorporating their discoveries and pivoting their angles as needed, while using ChatGPT for research. 
 
  • Get in the weeds and mentor students in navigating concrete challenges. Model your own thinking process via a research example, and then guide learners through one or more AI inquiry exercises until they demonstrate proficiency in using the tool.
 
  • Classroom teachers can invite students to design several iterative questions on a single topic using an AI chatbot, capture the resulting dialog, and present a critique of process.  
 
  • Delve into the risks of AI-assisted research. Have students try to generate biased or inaccurate chatbot responses based on intentionally ineffective prompts.
 
  • Guide students in using personal challenges, strengths, and opportunities as fodder for exploration in academic projects. 

Coaches and educators can help students integrate AI into their arsenal of tools, but not allow it to usurp their innate problem solving capabilities. 

Is your student looking for guidance in using research technology to maximize their academic confidence? Schedule a complimentary information session. 

​As an executive function coach and academic tutor, I specialize in helping individuals with learning differences exceed their goals for academics, organization, and college transition.
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ChatGPT Do’s and Don’ts for Students, Coaches and Educators

7/28/2023

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Smiling student with an open laptop
Image by Andrea Piacquadio

Help your students avoid the academic pitfalls of AI chatbots

Like them or not, AI writing generators, and their idiosyncrasies, have entered the classroom.

In other articles, we describe some risks associated with using AI chatbots for  assignments as well as how students can maintain rigorous standards with their AI-assisted academic projects.

Today’s article highlights best practices for generating meaningful search inquiries.

“Students with learning differences are facing a crisis where the allure of letting AI tools do the heavy lifting may feel too strong to pass up. Yet they may not understand how to create effective research inquiries, or recognize when a chatbot’s algorithm is incorporating poor content into its response. To make matters worse, neurodivergent learners may not appreciate the value of academic struggle, and how circumventing a healthy challenge ultimately serves to erode their confidence.” 

Problem: Ineffective Use of AI Writers as a Research Tool

We live in a culture where people often outsource judgment. Learners can internalize shame for academic missteps, and as a result, they may not trust their own reasoning. By contrast, AI writing generators bring forth slick and convincing output in a matter of seconds, which students may regard as more authoritative than their own ideas about a topic. 

However, AI writers have limitations. Their algorithms construct text based on the phrasing of a research question. Students can’t just type a question once and expect to be given a pertinent or adequate answer. Leveraging AI tools requires skill in formulating meaningful inquiries and follow-up questions that will generate germane output from a chatbot. However, many learners are unsure about how to conduct effective research inquiries.

Just because it comes out of a machine doesn’t mean it’s relevant. 

Neurodivergent learners may not fully understand how knowledge is constructed in the information age. Students using AI writers such as ChatGPT to get ideas for a writing assignment will quickly discover the breadth of existing knowledge about a subject. However, the first response from an AI chatbot may skate on the surface of a topic, be overly general, or not fully incorporate elements that are necessary to a student’s project focus. It is inadequate as a definitive conception of what to include in the academic essay they are composing. 

A high school student of mine recently needed help navigating an essay assignment on a book he had chosen from a list provided by his English teacher. He had also been given a list of literary themes he could cover in his paper. During class, his teacher suggested breaking the project into small steps, starting with answering several short questions designed to help the student establish a relationship between the novel and the literary theme. 

To the teacher’s credit, he designed a learning project that modeled experimental risk-taking with an emerging technology. The teacher had not read the book, and used ChatGPT to create sample sub-prompts for the student to use. In essence, the assignment was a test-drive of the AI writer’s strengths and limitations.

During our coaching session, the student and I both attempted to identify a connection between the sub-prompts, the original essay assignment, and the novel. Regrettably, neither of us could.

While I appreciate that the teacher opted to offer learners a trailblazing educational experience, ChatGPT’s ability to comb through unthinkably huge piles of data at breakneck speed had not resulted in pertinent research questions for my student. 


An internet search taught me enough about the story and its themes to suggest alternate questions that the student was then able to use to focus his essay subject. He identified quotes from the book that related to his chosen theme, and his essay was off and running. 

While all was well, I was left wondering — what did the learner need that ChatGPT’s output did not provide?

I was not privy to the original queries and search terms that resulted in essay sub-prompts that had a weak link to how the literary theme played out in the book. Yet my student’s experience drove home the importance of teaching learners effective research skills, particularly when using new technologies. 
ChatGPT's ability to comb through unthinkably huge piles of data at breakneck speed had not resulted in pertinent research questions for my student. 
The good news is that a well-crafted inquiry can generate germane output from an AI writer. Chatbots allow learners to ask slightly different versions of the same question in a single thread so that the resulting dialog offers multiple approaches to understanding a subject. It can also create successively deeper and more nuanced responses. 

Students can use iterative queries to hone meaningful content that informs the concepts they choose to include in the design of their projects. Keeping the same window open and asking follow-up questions drives the AI writer’s algorithm to drill down and get more specific information on a subject. 

​Here is an example of how to design successive prompts in ChatGPT to get increasingly more meaningful output:

Question 1

Screenshot of initial ChatGPT query shows output that is too generic..
ChatGPT's first response is too general for the student's needs.

Question 2

Screenshot of second inquiry to ChatGPT resulting in a more relevant response.
A follow-up question helps ChatGPT return more relevant content.

Question 3

Screenshot of third question to ChatGPT shows even more pertinent output for the student.
Subsequent questions tailor ChatGPT's output to the student's priorities.

​By incorporating more detail into follow-up questions, students can challenge the chatbot to yield more useful content. With each successive inquiry in a dialog thread, the output in that thread becomes more tailored to the information the learner is seeking. 

Students don’t need to live under the false assumption that ChatGPT’s first response is an appropriate overview of the info they are beginning to research. AI writing tools can be purposed as a dialectical learning device, allowing for a Socratic investigation, where a succession of back-and-forth “conversations” allows for a series of deeper questions and answers.  

Solutions and Tips: Coaches and educators must help students understand how to use AI tools such as ChatGPT to aid, rather than replace critical thinking. 

  • Create assignments that encourage your learner to use ChatGPT for initial research, but then hone their argument using analysis and writing skills. 
  • Help your student navigate AI chatbots by first creating a prompt that will generate an overview of what has been written about a subject. 
  • Teach learners to zero in on the specific aspects of a subject, challenge, or task that most pertain to their goals and values with respect to the assignment. 
  • Guide your students to refine their thinking with iterative queries that steer the chatbot’s output, resulting in increasingly relevant responses. 
  • In the classroom, students can discuss and analyze different versions of chatbot responses they receive from their queries.  ​

​While AI chatbots are a robust writing resource, students leveraging them for research must discern the most pertinent aspects of a topic, craft effective follow-up questions to generate a meaningful response, develop a unique angle, compose original language, and incorporate personal knowledge and specific evidence into their content. Classroom time or a tutor can help learners cultivate research habits that allow them to utilize AI tools as an asset to learning.

Is your student looking for guidance in using research technology to maximize their academic confidence? Schedule a complimentary information session. 

As an executive function coach and academic tutor, I specialize in helping individuals with learning differences exceed their goals for academics, organization, and college transition.
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Use ChatGPT to Enhance, Not Replace Your Student’s Skills

6/25/2023

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Picture
Image by Mikhail Nilov

How to Use AI Chatbots to Aid Critical Thinking Rather Than Make It​ Obsolete

ChatGPT Guidelines for Students, Coaches and Educators

In related articles, we discuss how learners can use AI writing generators effectively as research tools, as well as how students can maintain rigorous standards with their AI-assisted academic projects.

Today, we provide an overview of some risks associated with using AI writers for school assignments, as well as guidelines on how to leverage them effectively as learning tools.

ChatGPT has arrived at the party. This sleek chatbot platform developed by OpenAI makes it painfully easy for students to cheat, write their college essays, and respond to take-home exam questions.

Naturally, students want quick solutions. They struggle with skill gaps resulting from pandemic learning loss, information overload, learning differences, and stress. They have every motivation to employ academic shortcuts. 

Classroom educators are under intense pressure to help students make up for lost time, but may not have the resources to help each student raise their skills to grade level. 

Enter ChatGPT.

This natural language processing app creates near-instantaneous writing that appears at first glance to be comprehensive, sophisticated, and well organized. What student wouldn’t be tempted to hand in a poem, opinion piece, or critical analysis presented in this way? 

Educators and parents have long been concerned about academic plagiarism, but AI-generated writing cannot be detected by plagiarism checking software. Now, it is easier than ever for students to pass off prefab essays as their own. 

The problems with academic misuse of AI chatbots are even deeper than that. 

Students with learning differences are facing a crisis where the allure of letting AI tools do the heavy lifting may feel too strong to pass up. Yet they may not understand how to create effective research inquiries, or recognize when a chatbot’s algorithm is integrating low quality or inaccurate content into its explanation. To make matters worse, neurodivergent learners may not appreciate the value of academic struggle, and how circumventing a healthy challenge ultimately serves to erode their confidence.   
It’s riveting to read text that is rooted in an individual’s concrete perspective. ​
Students build analysis, problem solving, and communication skills by responding thoughtfully to academic prompts. Averting atrophy of critical thinking while using chatbots requires that students understand how to use them competently, so that they further, rather than stifle that learner’s cognitive development. 

The guidelines below can help your student leverage the positive features of using AI chatbots for academic work, and avoid some of their pitfalls.

Guidelines I use in my practice:

If your student is using AI chatbots as a tool for research or writing projects, you can make these recommendations:
  1. Identify your unique priorities. Before using AI chatbots to conduct research or craft a piece of writing, it is important for learners to get clear on their own priorities and desired focus. A ChatGPT response to an initial inquiry may be too generic to be a useful starting place, other than offering a broad overview of relevant possibilities. It’s essential that students weed out inaccurate info or points that are not connected to their project’s focus. They must narrow what they think are the most important ideas to emphasize in their argument. Note to student: “A computer cannot tell you who you are, or what you believe.”  
  2. Keep asking follow up questions. ChatGPT has a dialog interface which is not available through standard internet search. This back-and-forth feature allows learners to refine their research by drilling down. Rather than settling with the first summary that emerges from a chatbot, or seeing it as the definitive truth, students can be encouraged to notice where it could benefit from deeper investigation. They can pose additional queries in the same dialog thread, asking the algorithm to produce more specific commentary, or to take a different approach. The chatbot’s iterations can reflect increasingly more focused explanations. Prompt for student: “What information would improve the narrative coming from the chatbot?” 
  3. Customize your angle. An AI chatbot’s iterative interface can engage learners’ active input, helping them identify what they find inspiring and relevant, sharpen their discernment, and clarify their own viewpoints. Students have likes and dislikes, preferences, and topics they consider snooze-worthy. They may not love every school assignment, but they can be guided to apply curiosity to their use of AI research tools. Their resulting academic exploration and work will incorporate themes they actually find interesting. Tip for student: “Discover how the topic matters to YOU.” 
  4. Know your unique stories. ChatGPT’s output can be antiseptic, dry, and boring. Your student, on the other hand, possesses colorful thoughts, impressions, and inclinations. A slick automaton cannot compete with the subjectivity of human stories and memories. It’s riveting to read text that is rooted in an individual’s concrete perspective. At the end of the day, telling their own story empowers the student and affirms the value of their life experience in their learning process. Suggestion to student: “Avoid being generic. Personalize it.” 

The bottom line: Students can use AI chatbots as a starting point for research, but must learn to integrate details that illustrate their own insights and experience, eliminate unsuitable information, and craft a response or piece of writing using their own reasoning and communication skills.  

Students do not have to be passive, disempowered or outshone by AI chatbots. ChatGPT can help your learner explore, but it does not need to remove the sense of agency and empowerment that comes with being at the academic driving wheel. 

Is your student looking for guidance in using research technology to maximize their academic confidence? Schedule a complimentary information session. 
​
​As an executive function coach and academic tutor, I specialize in helping individuals with learning differences exceed their goals for academics, organization, and college transition.

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    Eve Chosak helps struggling learners exceed their expectations for academic, professional, and personal success.

    Who Am I?
    Why Do I Care?

    I was diagnosed with ADHD as an adult. As a young person, I could have used someone like me to get help navigating academics and life transitions. While I didn't have the benefit of a coach who understood learning differences, this blog allows me to ideally put my hard won insights to good use helping others.
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