E-learner`s handbook

Using chatbots

Microsoft Copilot (https://copilot.microsoft.com/), ChatGPT (https://chat.openai.com/), and other text generation tools or chatbots are systems based on artificial intelligence (AI) language models that can produce text.

When interacting with a chatbot, you must enter your question or request as a prompt. You might provide additional information and context in a follow-up question or request to ensure a better result. The chatbot then outputs a text that you can use to continue the dialogue and ask more specific questions.

Always verify the facts and source references provided by the chatbots!

Please note that the chatbot may cite fictional sources, make logical fallacies, formatting and grammatical errors, and give biased responses disregarding cultural differences or social norms. The output may not comply with data protection regulations and may contain false personal data. Therefore, check the facts and references provided. Using the chatbot’s output is the user’s responsibility. The user needs to have adequate knowledge to evaluate the text produced.

Since 2024, all members of the university can use the Copilot chatbot.
See instructions.

The university generally encourages using chatbots to support teaching and learning and develop students’ learning and working skills. Since 2024, all members of the university can use the Copilot chatbot. To do this, you must log in to https://copilot.microsoft.com/ with a university user account in the Microsoft Edge or Google Chrome web browser.

For example, you can use a chat tool for independent work to ask for clarification of terms, ask for ideas, revise a text, ask yourself follow-up questions, overcome the block of starting a piece of writing or the blank sheet fear; as a brainstorming aid; as a programming tool; for editing and translating a text; to develop critical thinking by evaluating the chatbot’s output; and to get a quick overview of voluminous material.

Using a chatbot has a large ecological footprint. Chatbots need powerful servers that consume much energy for work and cooling.

Lecturers have the right to decide whether to allow using the chatbot in their course or, if necessary, limit its use. Before completing an assignment, check whether chatbots are permitted in the course. If you use it regardless of restriction, fail to cite its use correctly, or submit a text created by the chatbot under your name, it is academic fraud and will be addressed the same way as other cases of academic fraud.

The important criteria when using chatbots are purposefulness, ethics, transparency, and a critical approach. Entering another person’s data into a chatbot and searching for their data is the processing of personal data and should, therefore, be avoided in teaching and studies. According to the General Data Protection Regulation, this can be understood as profiling an individual, which requires the explicit consent of the individual.

Lecturers must not require students to create a separate account or use their Google or Facebook account to use a chatbot.

Presenting chatbot-generated text as your personal thoughts in any academic text is academic fraud.

When you use the chatbot for writing a home assignment, explain (for example, in the methodology chapter, another text or appendix) how it was used: for example, describe the questions asked, the output received from the chatbot, and to what extent you changed it (examples 1 and 2). The description of chatbot use must clarify to what extent and how the chatbot was used for the work.

Example 1. I used ChatGPT in the course of the work to gather ideas / edit the text. The following prompts were input into the chatbot: “[—]”. The output received was as follows: “[—]”. I modified the output as follows: [—].

Example 2. The following definition is based on ChatGPT’s response given on 22 April 2023 to the question, “What is a language model?”. The result was as follows: “[—]” (OpenAI, 2023; see full text in Appendix X).

In-text citation depends on the specific referencing style used by the academic unit or journal (APA, Chicago, MLA, etc.). In some cases, it is recommended to refer to using the chatbot as communication with the chatbot (example 3) since a chat tool is not a published source but rather a text generation model that can provide different responses depending on the communication situation.

Example 3. I used ChatGPT for my home assignment (OpenAI, personal communication, 28 April 2023) to get ideas on customer service development. ChatGPT is an AI-based text generator developed by OpenAI (2023).

In the references list, you should indicate the chatbot developer, the year of the chatbot version used, the specific chatbot and its version, the type or description of the language model and the web address.

For example, the reference may be written in APA style as follows:

OpenAI. (2022). ChatGPT (20. detsembri versioon), suur keelemudel, https://chat.openai.com.

OpenAI. (2022). ChatGPT (20 Dec version), large language model, https://chat.openai.com.

Additional reading