Todd's AI Playground

I am very skeptical and concerned about how AI will be used. It is interesting what it can do, but like the television, I have doubts that we will use it well. More likely, like we usually do with techno mumbo jumbo, we will relentlessly abuse it. In education I am even less hopeful. The distance

AI Tips and Tricks from Wes Fryer (wesfryer.com/after)

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Why do I hear this sarcastic laughing from my Laptop...😜
#playingwithAI

Inspired by today’s #AIplaydate and #MagicSchool, I created an interactive Jeopardy game based on our current middle school coding lesson, using 5 different Scratch programming blocks!
https://jeopardylabs.com/368814

Woo hoo!

#coding #stem #PlayingWithAI #PlayDateCLT #edtech #MediaLit

JeopardyLabs

(1/2) My first AI tip / “playing with AI” #PlayingWithAI story for 2024:

I used ChatGPT to conduct “lateral reading” and help me with product reviews for inexpensive (but effective) ceramic space heaters.
https://chat.openai.com/share/9b7c70b6-e586-4290-85d8-3f5745f39e85

I noticed that Amazon is now offering AI generated summaries of customer reviews, which is very helpful.

Added to my ongoing “AI tips and tricks” Google Doc:
http://wfryer.me/tips

If you’re interested in “playing with AI” like

Here's my #ChatGPT English essay experiment for tonight, comparing Zora Neale Hurston’s 1937 “Their Eyes Were Watching God” with the dialect of Charles W. Chesnutt’s 1899 “The Conjure Woman.”

http://wfryer.me/chatgpt1

#ChatGPTdemo #AI #PlayingWithMedia #PlayingWithAI #edtech #edtechSR #pedagogy

Chat GPT Demo: Hurston and Chesnutt

ChatGPT Demo: Hurston and Chesnutt Compare and contrast the language and tone of Zora Neale Hurston’s 1937 “Their Eyes Were Watching God” with the dialect of Charles W. Chesnutt’s 1899 “The Conjure Woman.” Pay particular attention to the nuances of race, ethnicity, gender, and power relationship...

Google Docs