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John Loewen's avatar

Hi Ethan,

Thanks for sharing this article!

I've been using GPT-4 quite a bit over the past year to help me develop learning materials.

Let me share a few examples.

I teach a bunch of different 1st and 2nd year comp sci courses and I have found that this tool saves me SO much time when creating learning materials for my courses. For example, in my introduction to Operating Systems course, I can feed GPT-4 a set of slides and ask it to come up with some relevant C coding for Linux exercises based on the material. It does this pretty darn well. Or I can provide a complex question and ask it to create 3 simpler questions that prepare students for the more complex question.

And for "Teaching the AI" I have given tutorials on how to use GPT-Builder tool that is available with GPT-4 to set up a custom GPT to assist learners in creating data visualization code. You can give the GPT pre-fab instructions, some conversation starters, and any extra knowledge you want it to have access to (ie. you can upload CSV files).

There are a bunch of these pre-fab GPTs out there for GPT-4. I have messed around with Khan Academy's "Khanmingo Lite" which is a code tutor and with a tool called GeoGPT+ which assists you in creating GIS maps from a dataset.

And finally, I second your comments on GPT-4's propensity for hallucinations. It is essential to research and back-check everything it produces as it is predictably unpredictable in its responses.

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Zsuzsanna's avatar

I love this post. I downloaded the paper and will apply what is in there for sure. I teach undergraduate and graduate business students, and I found it is more and more difficult to come up with something that will induce them to go deeper into their studies. AI is a help here, and a great one. My master one class is now hooked on the subject - leadership - because we solved problems with AI, and they enjoyed it, and I saw a lot of "AHA" moments in class. The book is great, it is not just a good read, but also I feel that I live the science-fiction I once dreamed of.

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