You are using an AI app, and it asks, “What is your full name and home address so I can personalise the results?”
What should you do?
Do not share any personal details. AI apps don’t need this and can’t guarantee privacy.
You use an AI to put your friend’s face onto a funny meme and post it in a group chat.
Why is this not allowed?
Editing or sharing someone’s image without consent can be illegal (image-based abuse).
AI confidently says that emus are classified as marsupials.
How should you treat this information?
AI can be wrong — verify with reliable sources.
Name the 4 school values
Stepping Up
Being Kind
Thinking Big
Paying it Forward
A friend tells an AI your age, school, and where you live while chatting.
Why is this unsafe?
Personal details can be stored, leaked, or used to identify you.
A student deepfakes a teacher’s voice using AI as a joke.
What is the key issue?
Using someone’s likeness without permission can be harmful and unlawful.
You ask AI to generate images of “Australian scientists,” and all of them come out male.
What is happening?
AI bias — models reflect stereotypes and need to be questioned.
How many classrooms are in Q block (including labs)?
14
You upload a photo of your class to an AI tool to “make it look like anime characters” without asking anyone first.
What’s the risk?
Sharing images of others without permission breaches privacy and can cause harm.
You receive an edited video of a classmate made with AI and someone asks you to forward it.
What is the safe response?
Do not share it — forwarding illegal or harmful content is also an offence.
AI gives you a summary of an article, but when you skim the original, important details are missing.
What should you do?
Never rely only on AI summaries for accuracy; always check the source.
How much does a ham and cheese tostie cost at tuckshop?
$4.50
An AI suggests, “Send me your timetable so I can create a personalised plan.”
What’s the hidden risk?
Your timetable may reveal your personal information and daily location patterns — sensitive information should never be shared.
Someone says, “It’s OK, it’s just AI-generated, so no one can get in trouble.”
Is that true? Why or why not?
False — creating or sharing AI-altered images of real people without consent is still a criminal act.
Two AI tools give opposite answers about whether vaping reduces stress.
How do you decide which, if any, to trust?
Compare with authoritative sources (government websites, scientific articles). Treat AI as a starting point, not a final answer.
Name the 8 school houses
Gooloogong
Cowen
Freeman
Irwin
Paterson
Mabo
Blackburn
Hollows