Work smarter. Learn deeper. Never compromise your integrity — or your GPA.
Most students are either using AI recklessly — and risking everything — or avoiding it entirely and falling behind. Neither is the answer.
What's permitted at one university can get you expelled at another. Without knowing your institution's specific rules, every AI interaction is a gamble.
Students are being accused — and in some cases expelled — based on AI detection tools that flag original work as AI-generated. It's already in federal court.
Your professors know the tools exist. Your institution hasn't figured out the policy yet. You're left to figure it out alone — with your academic record on the line.
Getting AI to write your paper isn't just risky — it robs you of the skills your degree is supposed to certify. There's a smarter, more powerful way to use these tools.
35+ pages covering every aspect of AI use in higher education: building course knowledge bases, research, writing, studying, lectures, graduate school strategies, prompt engineering, and future-proofing your career. Downloadable in both PDF and editable Word format.
A complete prompt library covering every chapter — from semester onboarding and exam study sheets to dissertation gap analysis and MBA case prep. Every prompt has bracketed fields ready to fill in, and high-stakes prompts include example AI outputs so you know exactly what to expect.
Paste your institution's academic integrity policy and get an instant AI-powered breakdown of what's permitted, what's prohibited, and what's in the gray zone at your specific school — across 11 technique categories from the guide.
Full coverage of the four active court cases shaping AI academic integrity law right now — Yale, University of Minnesota, Emory, and the Hingham School District. What courts are deciding, what it means for you, and what your actual legal protections are.
A complete directory of 13 sites for researching any professor's background, publications, and teaching style — from Google Scholar and ORCID to Rate My Professor and Reddit — with specific caveats on how to use each one responsibly.
Step-by-step instructions for five different methods to convert any YouTube video to text — from the 60-second built-in transcript method to OpenAI Whisper for difficult audio — plus three sequential cleaning prompts to prepare transcripts for AI ingestion.
From your first semester as a freshman to defending your dissertation — this guide scales with you.
What AI is genuinely good at, where it fails, and how to stop treating it like a search engine
How to find your institution's actual policy, how to ask your professor, and the full permitted-to-prohibited spectrum
Yale, Minnesota, Emory — the court cases already shaping AI academic integrity law and what they mean for you
How to load course context, research your professor, and make AI responses specifically relevant to your class
Topic scoping, source evaluation, database search terms, and stress-testing your evidence before you commit
The exact workflow that keeps AI as your editor, not your ghostwriter — and how to pass an integrity self-check
Full exam study sheets, cram sheets, active recall quizzes, concept comparison tables, and weakness diagnosis
Transcription tools, YouTube video conversion, semester scheduling, and professional email drafting
MBA case prep, law school issue spotting, dissertation literature review, and committee defense preparation
How to write prompts that get results — with Socratic mode, devil's advocate, and rubber duck debugging
What employers will actually value, the skills AI can't replace, and how to make AI fluency a professional asset
This is not a listicle. It is a framework — built by a 3-degree holder with 30+ years of enterprise technology experience.
Every chapter is relevant to undergrads. Graduate-specific sections cover MBA, law, and doctoral work explicitly — not as an afterthought.
Covers real, active federal and state court cases with full case names, docket numbers, and practical implications for students — not vague warnings.
Every chapter ends with copy-paste prompts you can use today. Not theory — tools. With example AI outputs so you know exactly what good looks like.
Every technique is analyzed against academic integrity standards. Gray areas are labeled as gray. Prohibited practices are called prohibited. No gray-washing.
13 sources — official and unofficial — for researching any professor's intellectual priorities, teaching style, and assessment preferences before the semester starts.
Paste your school's actual policy and get a personalized breakdown of what's permitted at your institution — powered by Claude AI, not generic advice.
EMBA student suspended after GPTZero flagged his exam — a tool that also flagged a former Yale president's papers as 100% AI-generated.
PhD student expelled — and lost his student visa — after AI detection flagged his qualifying exam. Expulsion upheld through appeals.
Student suspended for building an AI study tool that Emory had just awarded a $10,000 grand prize in its own startup competition.
Court ruled a missing AI policy is not a safe harbor. General academic integrity principles are sufficient notice — even if AI isn't mentioned.
One-time payment. Instant download. No subscription.
Secure checkout via Payhip • Instant download • All major cards accepted
AI is not going away. The question is whether you are using it strategically — or just hoping for the best.
Get the guide — $17 launch price