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Using AI for School and Work

AI tools are increasingly used in academic and professional settings. Students may encounter them when writing, researching, analyzing data, or organizing information for work.

Common Ways AI is Used

In school and work environments, AI tools are often used to support tasks that involve language, information retrieval, or pattern analysis. Common uses include:

  • Drafting or editing written content
  • Summarizing readings or documents
  • Translating content or languages
  • Organizing notes or outlining ideas
  • Analyzing large amounts of information

AI as Support, not Replacement

In both academic and professional settings, AI is typically cast as a support tool rather than a replacement for human judgment.

While AI systems can generate text, suggestions, or code, they do not understand context in the same way people do. They may produce outputs that sound confident but are incomplete, misleading, or incorrect.

As a result, AI-generated material usually requires review, interpretation, and judgment by a person before it is appropriate for use in school or work.

Learning with Agility in the Age of AI

Accuracy and Reliability

AI tools can produce errors, make incorrect assumptions, or generate information that appears credible but is not accurate. This is especially common when tools are asked to retrieve factual information or cite sources. Models may generate plausible-sounding references that do not exist.

Because of this, AI output is often treated as a starting point rather than a final answer. Information generated by AI usually requires the user to check it against known, original sources or other reliable references.

Academic and Professional Expectations

Expectations around AI can vary widely across classes, disciplines, employers, and institutions. In academic settings, instructors may have different policies regarding whether and how AI tools can be used. In professional settings, organizations may have guidelines related to data handling, intellectual property, and decision accountability.

Understanding these expectations usually requires consulting the specific policies of your course, instructor, or organization. AI tools do not account for these expectations on their own.

Data, Privacy, and Confidentiality

Some AI tools store user input or use them to improve their systems. This can lead to situations where sensitive information enters third-party services, creating privacy or confidentiality concerns.

In school and work contexts, this may include unpublished research or an organization's proprietary information. The types of information entered into an AI tool can matter as much as the task the tool is used for.