Build Your AI Policy

Configure expectations for each category of AI use, then generate a shareable link for your students. Items set to N/A won't appear in the student view.

Quick Stance

Are you considering banning AI entirely for this assessment?

📖How the AI Disclosure Gate Works

Configure your AI policy for an assignment using the inventory below, then generate a student link. Students will review the policy, complete a short scenario-based quiz, disclose their AI use, and generate a PDF.

1. Configure Your AI Policy

For each AI use category, indicate whether it is Use Freely, Permitted, Discouraged, or N/A. Items set to N/A will not appear to students.

2. Generate a Student Link

Once configured, generate a unique link to share via your LMS or assignment instructions.

3. Student Completion

Students review the policy, answer 3 scenario-based questions, disclose which AI tools they used, and download a PDF disclosure.

Consider co-creating this policy with your students

We encourage instructors to co-create or at least openly discuss AI expectations with students. When students understand the rationale behind a policy and have some voice in shaping it, they are more likely to act transparently and less likely to see disclosure as purely punitive.

Privacy: Instructor settings are stored to generate your assignment link. No personal information is collected from students.

Assignment Details

Insert a sample message:

Set a password that students will see only after completing the policy quiz. Use this as a gate to ensure students review the policy before starting.

1 of 15 configured

📋Disclosure Requirement Defaults

Each permission level has a default disclosure setting. Use Freely items default to no disclosure; Permitted and Discouraged items default to disclosure required. You can override any individual item using the toggle on each row.

AI Planning

Using AI to begin or plan work — brainstorming, understanding concepts, organizing, and researching.

Ideation / Brainstorming

Generating initial ideas, topics, or directions

Concept Explanation / Understanding

Using AI to explain concepts or material

Outlining / Structuring Work

Creating structure or outlines for the assignment

Finding Evidence / Research

Locating relevant sources or materials

AI Assistance

Using AI for supportive tasks — editing, citation formatting, fact checking, and summarizing.

Editing or Proofreading

Grammar, spelling, punctuation only. Not rewriting.

Citation Formatting

Formatting citations or reference lists. Not inventing sources.

Fact Checking / Verification

Verifying claims against reliable sources

Summarizing Sources

Summarizing documents provided by the student

AI Collaboration

Using AI to transform or work with existing content — paraphrasing, translating, and debugging.

Paraphrasing / Rewriting Text

Rewording student or source text

Translation

Translating text between languages

Code Debugging / Explanation

Finding errors in or explaining existing code

Full AI Creation

Using AI to generate new content — text, media, data analysis, and code from scratch.

Text Generation

Generating sentences, paragraphs, or sections

Media / Image Creation

Generating images, audio, or video

Data Analysis / Visualization / Code Creation

Generating code, charts, or data outputs from scratch

Note — Humanizing Text is listed separately because it is primarily used by students to conceal AI-generated content. Unlike other AI uses, its purpose is to obscure the fact that AI was used at all, which is why it warrants distinct attention in your policy.

Humanizing Text

Using tools or prompts to make AI-written text sound more human

216/500

Use a suggested rationale:

👁️

Student-Facing Preview

What students will see when they open your link

Discouraged (1)

  • Humanizing Textdisclosure