How to Use GPT-3 to write Discussion Board Posts (Easy)

Discussion board posts are tedious. Pure busy work. Automate them.

 

Go to https://beta.openai.com/playground make sure the model is set to text-davinci-003. Set maximum length as high as possible, I’m assuming these are 250-1000 word discussion posts. Each token is four characters, but the output doesn’t necessarily use the max length every time so be generous with this.

 

OpenAI gives you free tokens to start with and after that you need to pay per token. Its well worth it, since you only pay for what you use you can get an entire semester of discussion board posts for only a couple bucks, if that.

 

Paste the discussion board prompt in and let the AI do its thing. If it still hasn’t reached the word count, paste in other relevant stuff from wiki or google scholar to coax out a higher word count. After that, cut and paste it together, make sure it flows.

 

On a large enough word count the AI may plagiarize from random internet sources. Use a plagiarism detector on the output to double check. If you want quick and easy use something like https://plagiarismdetector.net/ or any of the myriad of free browser based detectors. If you want something deeper download https://plagiarismcheckerx.com/ which has a limited free version and a higher caliber paid version.

 

If any of the output gets flagged as plagiarized, use a paraphrasing tool to reword it. https://quillbot.com/ is the best one ive found.

 

That’s pretty much it. This method works best with high school and freshman level humanities classes. Can be used for discussion board posts and short papers. Wont work on recent current events (post-2021). For more specialized tasks like lab reports or higher level research I don’t think this method is very useful, but maybe you can make it work.

 

Congrats, you’ve automated the boring stuff. Enjoy your free time.

Subscribe to singlemother.eth
Receive the latest updates directly to your inbox.
Verification
This entry has been permanently stored onchain and signed by its creator.