What counts as GenAI?
- Chat鈥慴ased tools (ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot Chat, etc.)
- Image/Video generators (DALL·E, Midjourney, Synthesia)
- Code helpers (GitHub Copilot, CodeWhisperer)
Tip: If a tool creates wording, images, code or data for you, it is GenAI.
University鈥憇upported tool
Digital Technology Services (DTS) currently supports Microsoft Copilot Chat in Microsoft 365. It is the only GenAI tool officially permitted for routine use across the University.
The three assessment categories
To help you know when you are, and are not, allowed to use GenAI in your assessments the University has devised a category for assessments which will be incorporated into your assignment briefs:
Category 1: Independent work |
What this means for you: You must demonstrate your own knowledge and skills without GenAI assistance. Typical assessment formats: Usually any assessment you do in-person, where its invigilated / supervised e.g. exams, vivas, practical lab tests |
Category 2: AI-supported |
What this means for you: You can choose to use GenAI to brainstorm, plan or polish, but the final submission must be in your own words and GenAI use is not assessed. Typical assessment formats: Usually any assessment you do on your own (i.e. coursework) - essays, reports, design projects. |
Category 3: AI-integrated |
What this means for you: Purposeful GenAI use is required and assessed (e.g. quality of prompts, critical evaluation of outputs). Typical assessment formats: Same as for Category 2 but your AI literacy will be assessed too. |
If the assignment brief says nothing about GenAI, assume its Category 1.
If anything is unclear or conflicting in your assignment brief, ask your lecturer before you start the assignment.
Lecturers might describe how and where you may use a tool instead of naming a category. When in doubt, map their description onto the categories above - or ask them for clarification.
Remember to include a GenAI use statement at the end of your work or on the coversheet.
Writing your GenAI use statement
Place a short note at the end of your work or on the coversheet. For example:
"I used ChatGPT 4o (https://chat.openai.com/) to brainstorm an outline and to suggest clearer wording for two sentences in Section 2. No AI鈥慻enerated text is presented as my own work."
Responsible GenAI use
Some do's and don'ts for using GenAI responsibly in your studies:
Do | Don't |
- Double鈥慶heck facts and references - Keep screenshots or files of your prompts & AI outputs - Paraphrase and add your own analysis - Add a GenAI Use Statement |
- Copy鈥憄aste large chunks unedited - Rely on AI鈥慻enerated references (“hallucinations”) - Enter personal or sensitive data - Hide or downplay your GenAI use |
Need help?
- Check out the Study Advice Team's to learn how to use generative AI with a critical (but open) mind, and how it can be used without breaking academic integrity rules
- Still unsure? Ask your module convenor before you submit your assignment