How Leeds Students Are Redefining Writing in the Age of AI

Charlie Tell (Mgmt26) presented his hermit crab writing projecta creative technique where writers use an existing structure, such as a newspaper, as a shell for new content. His mock publication, The New Negative Times, highlighted how most news stories tend to focus on negativity.泭
Heres a perennial question for business schools: How do we teach students to write well? In 2025, that question took on a new dimension: How do we prepare students to write effectively in an AI-driven world?
Weve all seen the chorus of headlines repeating a provocative question: 泭
For anyone doubting whether students can thrive as writers in the age of AI, Associate Teaching Professor Bonnie Auslanders Written Communications for Business Leaders (BADM 3020) class would quell any concerns. As 19 students wrapped up the semester, they each gave a two-minute presentation during a showcase of their projects. From personal stories to field guides and posters addressing societal and campus problems, students shared work that showed not only heart but also the critical thinking needed to know when to use AI to enhance their writingand when to set it aside.
Many of todays students are using AI with little guidance or supervision, said Associate Teaching Professor Jeremiah Contreras at this years Colorado Business Economic Outlook Forum. Leeds is addressing this challenge head-on. Over the past year, the school has accelerated its AI leadership through initiatives like attending industry events, launching experiential AI projects, and integrating AI tools into all BCOR courses and more than 30 others across the curriculum.
Exploring AI tools
Students in Auslanders class explored how AI can solve real-world problems and enhance creativity. Brayden Bengston (Fin26) tackled a common frustration: unproductive Zoom meetings. He used Fellow.AI, a generative AI meeting assistant, to help synthesize information, noting that the tool was able to detect tone, including sarcasm, offering a richer meeting summary than other AI tools.泭
Gauri Mahajan (BusAna26) experimented with wisprflow.ai, a dictation tool, and discovered that while it incorporates context well, it lacks transparency around its privacy policies. Lesson learned. While its easy to get caught up in features, its important to know where and how your data might be used," she said.
Unleashing the artist within
Recognizing the power of visual storytelling, several students showed how AI can elevate written content through compelling graphics and illustrations. Tate Metrokin (Mgmt27) used ChatGPT to create a graphic promoting outdoor activities. He incorporated a pie chart showing that 95% of people feel better outdoors, but achieving the right illustration required more than 100 prompts. AI can be limiting for creativity, but it also helps you grow in some respects, he said.
Shloka Madireddi (BusAna26) used ChatGPT to translate the concept of wealth inequality into a striking visual. She adapted the Met Gala controversy involving influencer Haley Kalils Let them eat cake video to create a poster featuring a large cake in the foreground, symbolizing the wealthiest 1%, while silhouetted figures symbolized the remaining 99%. She drew on the to adapt one form of writing into another form. AI helped me create something emotionally hard-hitting, she said.

From left to right, "hermit crab" writing projects from Tate Metrokin (Mgmt27), Ava McKelvie (Mgmt27) and Shloka Madireddi (BusAna26).
The human touch
Max Carmel (StrEnt26) explored AIs role in customer outreach for Cloakel Capital, a strategic advisory and transaction enablement firm he started with泭a partner. Using multiple AI models, including ChatGPT and Claude, he found that the generated content felt overly polished and unrelatable. The results bore that out: His AI-crafted messages received little to no response.
The solution? Carmel switched back to writing in his authentic voice. Using your personal voice is so much better, he said. By crafting messages that reflected his personality, he built trust and connection, resulting in a significantly higher response rate.
Creativity still wins
The student projects highlighted the diversity of thought and creativity that only human ingenuity can bring. Ava McKelvie (Mgmt27), an avid skier, mapped her college journey in the form of a ski trail map, while Charlie Tell (Mktg26) created a mock newspaper to illustrate how much of the information we consume is negative. The students discovered clever ways to use AI to illustrate real-world problems.
Brett Gardner (Acct26) embraced the Tell a Story, Get a Job exercise to craft a standout project. He used resi.ai to build a resume and LinkedIn profile tailored to a job opportunity in Namibia. Not knowing much about the country, resis search function helped him research and customize his application.
For Gardner, the exercise was more than just a class project. After graduation, he will begin his career at K繹nigstein Capital in Namibia.
Timeless lessons
Auslanders teaching approach is grounded in cautious optimism while relying on the tried-and-true methods that underscore human communication and connection.泭
Teaching business writing used to focus mostly on teaching the rules, like following proper formatting, how best to use boilerplate phrasing, and so on. But AI is a brilliant rule-follower. Now I can concentrate on the deeper question: When does using AI impede human connections?
Auslander asks students to explore the latest AI tools but also to embrace analog practices as well: handwritten journals, physical books, mailed thank-you notes. She wants students to grapple with a harder truth about AI: AI isnt just enhancing our work. Its fundamentally changing what we need to be good at. What matters now is discernment about when to use AI and when to turn to the creativity that makes your voice distinctively human.
AI can generate content, but it can't generate the critical thinking that comes from reading deeply and reflecting thoughtfully. The students who will thrive are the ones who read critically and think independently. AI can draft a perfect email in seconds, but it can't build the relationship that makes someone want to read it, she said.
She reminds students of another enduring tool for great writing: reading. While scrolling through content on phones may be the norm, she encourages students to embrace the joy of turning a physical pagea simple, yet profound act that mirrors how their own stories will continue to unfold.泭
In Their Own Voices
Students reflected on key takeaways from using AI and flexing their own writing muscles.
泭Using AI well required me to stay in control: keeping what matched my intention and rewriting the parts that felt too generic. I also learned to recognize when the suggestions werent actually improvements. Over time, I became much more strategic and used AI to spark ideas, not replace them. That shift helped me grow into a more confident and discerning communicator, and its a skill I know Ill bring into professional settings where AI is quickly becoming a standard tool.泭
Taylor Jarvie (Mgmt27)
泭Mostly what Im taking away is intentionality. Im way more deliberate now about what I'm trying to accomplish before I start writing. Whos this for? What do they need to leave with? What format makes that easiest? Where can AI actually help, and where do I need to rely on my own voice? My portfolio captures that shift: Its the arc from I talk a lot to I can communicate like a leader: On purpose. Across formats. With an awareness of the tools and responsibilities that come with it.泭
Angelo Christoff (Fin, Bus27)
泭泭I may not be the most naturally creative person, but this semester has shown me that creativity is not fixed. It expands when you are willing to take risks, make mistakes and try again. Without Professor Auslanders guidance, I would have presented Fellow.AI in a robotic way. I know what its like to sit through a bland presentation, and I couldnt make my peers endure that.泭
Brayden Bengston (Fin26)





