Category: ChatGPT

Ask ChatGPT to…

Chat GPT is a powerful tool that can be incredibly useful for teachers. Let’s take a look at some of the ways ChatGPT can benefit your teaching practice.

Ask ChatGPT to write a story:

Ask ChatGPT to ask comprehension questions:

Ask ChatGPT to write a collaborative story:

Ask ChatGPT to write out all student names with a unique poem:

You can ask ChatGPT to simplify the language:

Ask ChatGPT to write a Madlib:

Ask ChatGPT to play a game:

But the journey of improvement and growth doesn’t stop here. I’m eager to hear about the creative approaches and unique perspectives you’ve applied in your own experiences. Feel free to share your valuable ideas in the comments below; together, we can continue to inspire and support each other on this exciting path of progress., says ChatGPT.

Exploring Alternative AI Tools: Beyond ChatGPT

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is image-2.pngPressto helps you create writing prompts. It’s as easy as 1-2-3: simply enter the topic, select the grade level, and pick a writing plan. Then, hit the “Generate Writing Prompts” button, and voilà! Effortlessly access a plethora of writing prompts to fuel your students’ creativity and inspiration.

Kiwi Video Quiz Generator helps you to make questions with Youtube videos. You can always watch the video before you share it with students to make the necessary adaptations and changes according to your student’s needs.

DALL-E-2 creates pictures for your presentation. Just, type in what you would like the image to show, and DALL·E 2 takes care of the image generation.

Poe Chatbot is an alternative to ChatGPT. This bot can also answer your questions.

Conker is a quiz generator that uses your prompts to generate questions for students. You can provide your own prompts or even add a specific topic or source material for more personalized quizzes. After the AI generates the questions, you have the flexibility to adapt them to perfectly fit your group of students.

Magic Write in Canva allows you to write a prompt and help you get out a first draft. Start with a prompt and watch as blog outlines, lists, captions, content ideas, and brainstorms appear in seconds.

Do you have a preferred AI teaching tool that you’d like to include in this compilation? Let me know in the comments.