I feel a million years old because I don't understand how to use it. I played with it a little in the bing search feature and it was good, but I basically asked it questions I already knew the answers to. I need a Chat GPT for dummies link LOL.
Post by sandandsea on Jun 14, 2023 10:55:40 GMT -5
I’ve used it to help draft performance reviews and more difficult emails and memos but have to leave out the identifying specifics so it’s only good as a language tool and I have to go back in and add individual specifics and examples.
A classmate of my daughter's used it for an essay and the teacher quickly recognized it and failed him AND it will be on his permanent transcript. Seemed a little harsh to me but I guess it was a teachable moment for the rest of the class. This was an honors level English class so the kid is a very capable student.
Post by jeaniebueller on Jun 14, 2023 11:09:24 GMT -5
I used it to start a press release once but it just got me started and I went back and added more information to it. I found it very helpful to get past initial writer's block
I haven't yet, but my H is using it a decent amount I think. He does a lot with code writing for analyzing data and pulling lists of articles to review, and I think it's been helpful for both of those things. I don't know a ton of specifics though.
I've used it a few times with success. If you copy in the transcript of a Zoom meeting it will spit out a 2-3 paragraph overview of the discussion. That's great for notes. I used it to create a draft outline for a 3 workshop series on Authentic assessment that matched almost exactly the one my colleague drafted herself I've also used it a couple of times to write haikus about projects just for fun, such as ...
Skeptical voices,
GBCN questions and doubts,
ChatGPT listens.
My tech team at work used it to create an interface that spit out haikus for an event based on 1-3 terms. We had a guy in a robot suit walk around with an ipad to get people to use it and the haikus populated on our welcome board. It was fun.