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  1. Prohibit All Use

    • Some curricular contexts require unaided student performance.

    • In these cases, faculty should be explicit about the details and consequences of the prohibition, and also explain to students the rationale for the prohibition (such as targeted skill development) to help them understand context and broader professional or disciplinary norms and expectations.

  2. Allow Use Only as Permitted

    • Some curricular contexts may allow, encourage, or require use of supports in limited, pre-determined ways.

    • In these cases, clearly indicate for which scenarios, assignments, and learning tasks use of these tools is appropriate. It would be helpful to clarify your rationale, explicit expectations for citation or acknowledgement, and limitations, risks, and responsible use of the tools within permitted contexts.

  3. Allow Broader Use with Explicit Acknowledgment/Attribution

    • Some curricular contexts may allow, encourage, or require more versatile student use of supporting tools but still require explicit, formal acknowledgement of use and citation.

    • It would be helpful to explicitly indicate how students should acknowledge the use of these tools. Remind students of the tools’ limitations, risks, and their responsibility for all work and communication they claim as their own.

  4. Freely Allow Use

    • In some cases, free use of these tools without formal acknowledgement may be appropriate.

    • In such cases, it is necessary to guide student understanding of the boundaries of responsible use and tool limitations or risks. Students may still need to describe how supporting tools were used, even if not explicitly acknowledged.

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