Imagining History with AI
What can generative AI teach us about the past?
ChatGPT is not a historian. It is not a teacher. It has never even read a book. But it might be the tool you've always wanted. This is a quick-start guide.Read Up
Check out this padlet of readings and resources related to AI and teaching. If you attended the July 2025 GSOC Workshop this is what you are looking for, yes, Kelly's slide deck is available via the padlet.The AI Pedagogy Project
There might be a better launch pad for understanding and applying AI in teaching, but we haven't found it. This site was created by metaLAB [at] Harvard. It is well-designed from top to bottom. There is even a section expressly for high school educators.
Generative AI in Student-Directed Projects: Advice and Inspiration
A project from the Creative Computing Lab at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. It includes an interactive website and downloadable guide (pdf).
Explained: Generative AI
A clear and concise introduction to what you need to know about generative AI published in MIT News in November 2023. Of course hundreds of articles have appeared since 2023, but few get the essentials across as quickly and effectively.
Gear Up
ChatGPT. OpenAI's ChatGPT is a machine learning model built to create new content that resembles the content on which it was trained. DALLE-3 is OpenAI's image generator. These days, if you create an image using ChatGPT, that image is being created by DALLE-3.Perplexity.ai is an AI-powered search engine rather than a chat tool. It is an interesting counterpoint to ChatGPT within the world of AI.
Gemini is Google's chatbot. It began life as "Bard" and was renamed/relaunched in 2023.
OpenArt.ai is a free image generator (though the free account has limitations)