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Thank you to the University of Arizona for the use of this guide. “Student Guide to ChatGPT ” by Nicole Hennig is licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0.
Feel free to copy this guide, in part or in its entirety, in your own LibGuide.
Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.”
Learn what it's useful for and how to prompt effectively.
Remember to always verify the information it gives you.
See all of our FAQs about generative AI.
Check with your instructor for each course to find out the policy on using ChatGPT and similar tools.
Remember, you'll always need to verify the information, because ChatGPT will sometimes make things ups (known as "hallucination.")
What is it good for?
What is it not so good for?
Note: You may want to try one of these sites that summarize web search results with generative AI. (But don't use ChatGPT, since it's not connected to web search).
Asking for any information that would have dire consequences if it was incorrect (such as health, financial, legal advice, and so on). This is because of its tendency to sometimes make up answers, but still sound very confident.
What is prompting?
Simply, it's what you type into the chat box.
ChatGPT sometimes makes things up. That's because it's designed to write in a way that sounds like human writing. It's not designed to know facts.
Tips for writing effective prompts
Examples
Or...
I didn't like any of those topics. Please give me 10 more.
More tips
If you want to learn more about prompting, try this free course: Learn Prompting
To learn more, try out the new tutorials about ChatGPT from the University of Arizona. They contain short videos (3 min or less), and quiz questions for self-review of what you learned.