Start by telling the AI who it is pretending to be, such as a creative middle school teacher who loves project-based learning, which instantly sets the right tone. Next, share a little context about your students, perhaps mentioning that you need an activity for a specific grade level working in small collaborative groups. Clearly state what you want the end result to be, whether that is a list of project ideas or a collaborative team challenge. Remember that you have total control over the direction, so if you want to avoid traditional, compliance-based worksheets, just say so right in your prompt and explicitly ask for an interactive experience where students have choices.
Trending
- UT System makes it easier to shutter programs, fire faculty
- Louisiana Gov. Landry Declares Other Government Raises Off-Limits After Teacher Pay Amendment Fails – The 74
- 2026-2027 UBS Scholars Program (Deadline: June 14, 2026)
- Shenandoah University Alum Lives Out Dream Of Earning A Pharm.D.
- Specter of AI Haunts Class of 2026
- Botstein Speaks on Epstein, “Sloppy” Investigation at Dinner
- Surgeon General Advisory Wants Kids to Live ‘Beyond the Confines of Screens’
- 10 Team Leader Training Strategies
