I used AI to brainstorm my 500 word essay and it actually helped

HenryDavis

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Feb 24, 2026
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I did NOT use AI to write my essay.

I used it to think. There's a huge difference. I was assigned a 500 word essay on the economic impact of the printing press for my history of technology class, and I was completely stuck. I knew the basics—more books, more literacy, Reformation, yada yada—but I couldn't figure out how to structure it into a coherent argument. My ideas were just a jumbled mess in my head.

So, on a whim, I opened up one of those AI chatbots and typed: "I need to write a 500 word essay on the economic impact of the printing press. Give me some possible thesis statements and outline structures." And you know what? It gave me some really interesting angles I hadn't considered. 🤔

One suggestion was to focus on the printing press as a "disruptive technology" that created new industries (like papermaking and bookbinding) while destroying others (like the manuscript-copying monks). Another was to look at how it standardized information, which led to more efficient trade and banking. I took those ideas, did my own research to find specific examples and evidence, and suddenly I had a direction.

The AI was like a brainstorming partner who never gets tired and has read a lot of Wikipedia. I didn't copy a single sentence it gave me, but it unlocked my own thinking. It helped me move from "I have nothing to say" to "I have too much to say, now I need to edit." I feel like we should talk more about using these tools ethically. They're not just for cheating. They can be amazing for overcoming writer's block or for seeing your topic from a new perspective.

My final essay was about how the printing press created the first mass-market information economy, and I'm actually proud of it. It was my work, just with a little digital nudge in the right direction. Does anyone else use AI as a creative springboard, or am I alone in this? ✨
 
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Henry this is such an important distinction that people don't talk about enough. Using AI as a tool vs using it as a crutch. I'm a comp sci major and even we talk about this constantly. Like yeah we can use AI to help debug code or suggest approaches, but if you just copy-paste without understanding, you're screwed when you have to actually explain your code in an interview.

The same applies to writing. If you use AI to brainstorm and then do the actual work, you're learning. If you just copy, you're not. It's that simple.

Also the printing press example is perfect because it's literally about how new technology disrupted existing systems. The irony is beautiful. You're using AI to write about how people freaked out about the printing press the same way people freak out about AI now. History repeats itself etc etc.
 
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