CurricuLLM is designed to give curriculum-aligned answers, but teachers and students should still use professional judgment to confirm accuracy.
Why this matters
- AI tools summarise information but can sometimes oversimplify or misinterpret.
- Cross-checking builds trust in the system while keeping learning rigorous.
How to check
- Compare with curriculum documents → ask CurricuLLM to show the outcome or content description it is linking to.
- Check against class materials → verify with textbooks, teacher notes, or school resources.
- Use a second source → if an answer feels uncertain, confirm it with a trusted website, journal, or reference book.
For teachers
- Encourage students to treat CurricuLLM as a first draft or guide, not the final word.
- Use it as a tool to start discussions, e.g. “Does this answer match what’s in our syllabus?”
- Model cross-referencing in lessons so students learn the habit.
For students
- Don’t assume every answer is perfect, check it against your notes.
- If something doesn’t look right, ask follow-up questions like:
- “Which curriculum outcome does this match?”
- “Can you explain that another way?”
- Remember that double-checking is a normal part of learning.
Summary
Accuracy improves when answers are cross-referenced. Treat CurricuLLM as a partner in learning, confirm, compare, and question its responses just as you would with any other resource.