Welcome to the AI Guidelines Builder! This tool helps faculty create clear, customized AI use guidelines for their courses and assignments.
Getting Started
Step 1: Log In
- Go to https://aiguidelinesbuilder.lemiscatemind.com
- Enter your @cua.edu email address
- Click "Send Code"
- Check your email inbox for a 6-digit verification code
- Enter the code in the login screen
- Click "Verify"
Creating Guidelines
Choose Your Type
You can create two types of guidelines:
- Course Guidelines - Overall AI use policy for your entire course
- Assignment Guidelines - Specific AI rules for individual assignments
Click the appropriate button to begin.
Step 1: Select Your AI Use Tier
The builder offers 5 tiers of AI restriction, from fully prohibited to fully open. Choose the tier that best matches your learning objectives:
π« Tier 1: Fully Prohibited
Best for foundational skills, assessments of individual mastery, or high-stakes evaluations.
When to use:
- Introductory courses where students are learning fundamental concepts
- Final exams or certification assessments
- Writing assignments focused on developing core composition skills
- Any work where you need to assess unaided student capability
β οΈ Tier 2: Restricted Use
Best for courses where you want students to develop core skills first, with limited AI assistance.
When to use:
- Courses where students are building proficiency in a skill
- Assignments where you want to see student thinking process
- Work that requires demonstrating understanding of methodology
- Projects where AI can help with research but not primary work
βοΈ Tier 3: Balanced/Structured Use
Best for intermediate courses where students have foundational skills and can benefit from AI as a learning tool.
When to use:
- Upper-level undergraduate courses
- Assignments that involve iteration and revision
- Projects where you want students to learn from AI feedback
- Work that emphasizes critical thinking about AI outputs
π€ Tier 4: Collaborative/Encouraged Use
Best for advanced courses, professional development, or project-based learning where AI is a workplace tool.
When to use:
- Graduate courses or capstone projects
- Professional skills courses (business writing, coding, design)
- Collaborative projects mirroring real-world work
- Assignments focused on outputs rather than process
β Tier 5: Fully Open
Best for advanced courses, professional programs, or when learning outcomes are tool-agnostic.
When to use:
- Graduate professional programs
- Courses focused on real-time application or performance
- Projects where the final product matters most
- Courses teaching AI literacy and tool mastery
Step 2: Customize Your Guidelines
After selecting your tier, you'll see customization options based on your choice. The builder will guide you through:
Common Customization Options
Context & Purpose (All Tiers)
- Why these AI restrictions exist
- How they relate to learning objectives
- What skills students are developing
Permitted Uses (Tiers 2-4)
- Check the specific ways students CAN use AI
- Examples: research, brainstorming, editing, coding assistance
Citation Requirements (Tiers 3-4)
- How students should document AI use
- What level of detail is required
Reflection Questions (Tiers 3-4)
- Prompts for students to think critically about AI use
- Helps students learn from AI interactions
Assessment Considerations (Tiers 4-5)
- How you'll evaluate work that uses AI
- What you're looking for in student submissions
Step 3: Additional Sections (Optional)
University Policy Reference (Recommended - Checked by Default)
Adds a section reminding students that your course/assignment guidelines operate under the University's broader Generative AI Policy.
Consequences/Enforcement
Add clear consequences for violating your AI guidelines. Choose from:
- β οΈ Warning and redo assignment for partial points (first violation only)
- β Failure of the assignment (zero points)
- π« Failure of the course
- π Report to school or college academic dean
- βοΈ Responsibility for all errors in AI-generated content
Student Acknowledgment
Adds a signature section where students confirm they've read and understand the guidelines.
When to use:
- High-stakes assignments
- When you want documented proof of student awareness
- First assignment of the semester to set expectations
Step 4: Review and Export
Preview Panel
The right side of the screen shows a live preview of your guidelines as you customize them. This is exactly what your students will see.
Student Examples Section
Below your guidelines, you'll see "What This Means for Students" examples showing:
- β Acceptable use cases
- β Unacceptable violations
These examples help students understand the practical application of your rules.
Exporting Your Guidelines
Once you're satisfied with your guidelines, you have several options:
Option 1: Copy to Clipboard
- Click "Copy to Clipboard"
- Paste into your syllabus, Learning Management System, or assignment instructions
Option 2: Download as Text
- Click "Download as Text"
- Downloads a plain text file you can edit
- Easy to paste into any document or LMS
Option 3: Download as HTML
- Click "Download as HTML"
- Downloads a formatted HTML file
- Can be opened in browser or uploaded to web platforms
Best Practices
π Start Broad, Then Specific
- Create course-level guidelines first (sets overall policy)
- Create assignment-specific guidelines for individual projects
- Assignment guidelines can be more or less restrictive than course policy
π― Align Guidelines with Learning Objectives
Ask yourself:
- What skills am I trying to assess?
- Will AI use help or hinder student learning here?
- Is this how professionals in this field would work?
π¬ Communicate Clearly
- Include guidelines in your syllabus
- Review them on the first day of class
- Remind students of specific rules when giving assignments
- Be available to answer questions
π Iterate and Adjust
- Your first guidelines don't have to be perfect
- Adjust based on student questions and challenges
- Different assignments may need different tiers
- Stay flexible as AI tools evolve
π Provide Examples
- Use the built-in student examples
- Add your own discipline-specific scenarios
- Show students what acceptable AI use looks like in your field
Tips for Different Disciplines
Writing-Intensive Courses
- Consider Tier 1-2 for foundational writing skills
- Tier 3-4 for advanced writing projects with revision
- Always require citation of AI use for transparency
STEM Courses
- Tier 2-3 for problem sets (show your work)
- Tier 4-5 for coding projects (tool proficiency matters)
- Consider restricting AI for exams but allowing it for projects
Professional Programs
- Tier 4-5 (mirror real-world tool use)
- Focus on output quality and professional judgment
- Teach responsible AI use as a professional skill
Creative Courses
- Varies by assignment goal
- Tier 1-2 for skill development exercises
- Tier 3-5 for portfolio pieces or collaborative projects
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know which tier to choose?
Ask yourself: "Am I assessing the student's independent capability, or the quality of their final work?"
- If capability β Lower tiers (1-2)
- If final output β Higher tiers (4-5)
- If both/learning process β Middle tiers (3)
Can I use different tiers for different assignments?
Yes! It's common to have:
- Tier 1-2 for exams and foundational assignments
- Tier 3-4 for major projects with iteration
- Tier 5 for capstone or professional portfolio work
What if a student violates my guidelines?
- Refer to the consequences you selected in Step 3
- Document the violation
- Follow your institution's academic integrity procedures
- Consider if the violation was intentional or a misunderstanding
Can I edit the guidelines after downloading?
Yes! All export formats (copy, text, HTML) can be edited. The builder creates a starting pointβyou can customize further to fit your needs.
Do I need to create new guidelines every semester?
No! Save your guidelines and reuse them. You may want to:
- Review annually as AI tools evolve
- Adjust based on student feedback
- Update for new assignment types
How do I enforce citation requirements?
- Make citation format clear (included in Tier 3-4 customization)
- Include examples in your assignment instructions
- Consider using a "How I Used AI" reflection prompt
- Provide a template or citation guide
Getting Help
Technical Issues
- Cannot log in? Make sure you're using your @cua.edu email
- Code expired? Request a new one (they're valid for 5 minutes)
- Guidelines not displaying? Try refreshing your browser
Pedagogical Questions
- What tier should I use? Consider consulting with your department or the Center for Teaching and Learning
- How to assess AI-assisted work? Focus on learning objectives and demonstrated understanding
- Setting appropriate boundaries? Think about professional standards in your discipline
Staying Current
AI tools and best practices are evolving rapidly. Consider:
- Reviewing guidelines each semester to ensure they're still relevant
- Asking students for feedback on clarity and feasibility
- Sharing approaches with colleagues to learn what works
- Staying informed about university policy updates
Quick Start Checklist
- Log in with your @cua.edu email
- Choose Course Guidelines or Assignment Guidelines
- Select your AI use tier (1-5)
- Customize options based on your learning objectives
- Add University Policy Reference (recommended)
- Add consequences/enforcement section
- Review the live preview
- Check student examples for clarity
- Export guidelines (copy, text, or HTML)
- Add guidelines to your syllabus or assignment instructions
- Communicate guidelines clearly to students
- Be prepared to answer student questions
Ready to create your first set of guidelines?
Log in at https://aiguidelinesbuilder.lemiscatemind.com and get started!
Questions or feedback? Send an email to [email protected]
Last Updated: December 17, 2025