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BusyBee Chats are a Buzz Add-on
If you are interested in trying BusyBee Chats, reach out to your account manager or school administrator.
BusyBee Chats give students a fun, personalized way to explore ideas, practice skills, and improve their work through AI-powered conversations that are a curated part of their learning journey.
You can add chats directly from your syllabus, students open and complete them like any other activity, and teachers can monitor and review each conversation.
Whether you're supporting writers, language learners, or future scientists, BusyBee Chats make it easier to guide, challenge, and connect with every student.
- Tailor every chat to your course with your content, goals, and instructions
- Keep learning safe and on track with built-in AI guardrails, automated monitoring, and teacher reviews
- Guide deeper thinking without giving away answers
- Build future-ready skills as students learn to use AI responsibly and effectively
- Save time while delivering powerful, personalized learning experiences
Add any BusyBee Chat as an activity in your course
Buzz includes a number of BusyBee Chats designed to help students build specific skills. You can find them all and learn about them in the Add activity screen.
- In the Syllabus, click Add activity.
- To see all of the skill-based chats Buzz offers, click the BusyBee filter.
- Each chat title summarizes the skill the chat focuses on and you can click Learn more to get additional information about each.
- Add the chat to start editing it for your course.
Each chat type has a built-in skill-specific prompt to help BusyBee guide it successfully
Chat Authoring
As with any activity, you can provide:
- A Title.
- An Activity themes if they're set up in your course.
- A Thumbnail image to represent the activity by clicking the plus sign next to the thumbnail.
- Recommended file type: PNG or JPG (Buzz converts all files into PNGs.)
- Ideal size: 400px x 400px (Buzz automatically resizes images, so uploading images smaller than 400px x 400px may reduce quality.)
- Descriptive Content and Activity Instructions for students that appear at the top of the chat.
- Attachment files for students to review for the activity.
BusyBee Chats don't use any of the text provided in the fields above to inform the conversation. They are for student use only.
Chat settings
In Chat settings, you provide guidelines and content for how BusyBee should interact with the student in the activity. All chat types have a shared set of standard fields for you to complete and some have additional fields specific to that type.
For all chat types:
- The type of chat you added is included in the Chat settings header (Interview in this example).
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Conversation topic is a short description required to help BusyBee understand the conversation's context and purpose. The topic could be:
- A scenario - Interviewing a professional about their career in veterinary medicine
- A concept to explore - Exploring cellular respiration and photosynthesis
- A skill to practice - Debating the pros and cons of school uniforms
- First message from BusyBee lets you create first message used in the chat for every student. This is optional but  it can help support the purpose and structure of the conversation.
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Grade level informs the complexity of language, concepts, and scaffolding used in the activity. BusyBee also adapts to the student during the conversation..
- If your school uses OneRoster to create courses, you can also set a course grade level. When set using standard CEDS values, this grade level will apply to activities that don't have one set here.
- Language allows you to set a specific language for the conversation.
- Check Allow students to upload files to let students upload files for BusyBee to review.
- Allowed file types: PDFs, text files (.txt), or Google docs (where sharing permissions are set for anyone with a link). BusyBee reads text only (no images).
- In Additional instructions to guide BusyBee, you can tell BusyBee how to act and what to do in the chat. This is not required and work alongside your other settings if added.
- You can Add evaluation rubric. Students can ask BusyBee to evaluate their performance in the conversation. Teachers can review them and get their own summary of these evaluations for all students. Adding a rubric helps focus feedback on your goals.
- Click Preview at any time while authoring to test the chat.
Settings for specific chat types
The following chat types have the following settings in addition to those outlined above: Â
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Writing: Pre-writing | Drafting | Revising | Editing
- Type of writing: Allows the author to specify the nature of the writing assignment to better focus the Chat (Argumentative, Creative, Informal, Literary analysis, Poetry, Research paper)
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Debate
- Student's position: Â Allows the author to specify which side of a debate the student should argue.
- Restricted topics: Allows the author to specify topics or keywords that are off limits in the debate.
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Quiz me
- Question difficulty: Allows the author to choose the difficulty level of the questions (Basic, Intermediate, Challenging, Advanced, Expert)
- Question types: Allows the author to choose the types of questions that should be asked (Multiple choice, Multiple correct, Essay, Fill in the blank)
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Language
- Chat in selected language only: Allows the author to restrict the chat to use the language being taught to suppor full-immersion learning practice.
Chat characters
Chat characters are predefined profiles with names, images, and descriptions. When added to a chat, BusyBee takes on that character's personality and background for the conversation.
Once you have created characters with Course settings, you can add them to an activity:
- In Chat characters, click Add character.
- Select a Character.
- Click Add character. If you add more than one character, the student is able to choose which character they want to chat with.
Chat sources
Add sources to inform the conversation.
- Click Add source to choose a PDF, text file, or website as a source. BusyBee reads only text (no images).
- When you add a source, the How sources influence BusyBee field appears. Use it to indicate how strongly the sources should influence BusyBee's responses (No preference, Sources preferred, Sources strongly preferred).
- Websites are processed at the time they are added as a source. A Last processed date is included with sources to make it easy to identify how current they are.
- If changes are made to a website after you've added it as a source, you can click Reprocess sources so those changes are reflected in the activity.
- BusyBee also checks the last processed date for website sources when Chats are played, and if it is older than 30 days, it is automatically reprocessed.
Learn more about chat types and BusyBee instructions
Every BusyBee Chat is prompted to stay within general educational guidelines and act as an educational guide. In addition to this, they are informed by the settings selected and sources provided when authoring the chat.
The BusyBee instructions field in Chat settings gives you the opportunity to add to the prompts already included in the chat.
- In Custom chats, these instructions can be very important if you want it to create a specific kind of learning experience, but they aren't required. If you don't provide instructions, BusyBee will use the other settings and sources to ask the student questions about the purpose of the chat.
- In the other Chat types, BusyBee has a built-in prompt designed to meet the needs of that type. You can still add instructions, but they aren't always necessary.
Here's a simple framework to use when creating BusyBee instructions:
- Start by telling BusyBee what role it should take (often with "You are...").
- Explain what you want it to do and what it should avoid.
- Finish by describing how it should behave or communicate.
If you want a Custom chat to work as a study partner, for example, you could use the following instructions:
You are a student peer and study partner. Take turns asking each other questions about the topic. Encourage the student to explain their thinking, and ask follow-up questions to deepen understanding. Don't overcomplicate concepts. Keep the tone casual and supportive.
Chat types and prompts
Each specific chat type has a prompt built in to help it accomplish the goals of that type. Below is a summary of how those prompts are designed to help it succeed:
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Custom Chat lets teachers design unique chat activities by providing their own instructions to the AI.
- BusyBee is prompted to follow teacher-written instructions while staying within general educational guidelines. It adapts its tone, content, and behavior to suit the learning goal defined in BusyBee instructions.
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Debate Chat helps students practice respectful argumentation, defend their ideas, and strengthen reasoning skills.
- BusyBee is prompted to take a clear, opposing position unless told otherwise and debate the topic respectfully using logic, examples, and rebuttals. It encourages the student to strengthen their reasoning and follows topic boundaries and source constraints.
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Interview Chat helps students explore a career, life experience, or personal perspective by interviewing an AI character.Â
- BusyBee is prompted to respond as a knowledgeable interviewee. It stays in character and shares insights, stories, and advice using clear language that matches the student’s curiosity and level.
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Language Chat provides language practice through conversation, vocabulary support, and grammar correction in the target language.
- BusyBee is prompted to act as a language tutor, speaking mainly in the target language and adapting to the student’s level. It encourages full-sentence responses, gently corrects mistakes, and stays in character when used in themed scenarios.
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Problem-Solving Chat supports students as they work through multi-step challenges in subjects like math, science, health, or life skills.
- BusyBee is prompted to act as a patient coach, guiding students one step at a time using scaffolded, open-ended questions. It avoids giving answers, skips no steps, and only offers short reminders when necessary to help students reason independently.
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Quiz me Chat allows students to review and reinforce knowledge by answering questions tailored to a specific topic and difficulty level.
- BusyBee is prompted to ask one question at a time using the selected question types, provide brief feedback after answers, and adjust content based on difficulty, grade level, and source material.
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Writing: Pre-writing Chat helps students choose a topic and organize ideas before drafting a writing piece.
- BusyBee is prompted to guide brainstorming and planning by asking scaffolded questions about topic, thesis, and structure. It tailors support to writing type and grade level but should not generate sentences or paragraphs.
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Writing: Drafting Chat supports students as they develop their draft, offering guidance on structure, development, and transitions.
- BusyBee is prompted to begin by asking what the student has already written and then offer feedback one section at a time. It identifies what’s missing, encourages development, and helps connect ideas without generating content.
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Writing: Revising Chat guides students in improving the clarity, organization, and content of their full draft.
- BusyBee is prompted to review the full draft and offer big-picture feedback--highlighting what to add, move, or cut. It provides one or two targeted suggestions at a time to support meaningful revision without generating content.
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Writing: Editing Chat helps students identify and correct grammar, punctuation, and sentence-level issues in their writing.
- BusyBee is prompted to point out one type of error at a time, explain the issue, and show an example correction. It then prompts the student to locate and fix similar issues, helping them practice independent editing without generating content.
Activity settings
If you choose to set a Due date (not available for continuous courses), you can specify:
- The grading Period you want the activity to be a part of. Separate grading Periods allow you to divide grades by date range without building additional courses in Buzz.
- Note: This appears only if you've enabled Periods in your course.
- A Due date and set the Due date and time (not available for continuous courses).
- This can also be managed in the Editor > Scheduling screen.
- Learn more: How does Buzz handle Due dates, Visibility dates, and Score release dates for students in different time zones?
- Whether to Allow late submissions, and what the Late rule and Grace period rules are (not available for continuous courses).
Visibility and access
With Visibility and access settings, you can choose to: Â
- Make the activity Visible to:
- Students, teachers and observers: This is the default setting for activities intended for students to complete.
- Teachers and observers: This setting works well for Lesson Guide materials that observers like parents, mentors, etc. need access to. A map icon appears next to these activities in the Activities pages for teachers and observers.
- Teachers only: This setting works well for Lesson Guide materials that only teachers need. A map icon appears next to these activities in the teacher Activities page.
- Check the Hide from student's table of contents and to-do list box. Note that it is still accessible with course links and bookmarks unless otherwise restricted.
- Check the Block access until student completes other activity box.
- If it appears, you can check the Require passing score if gradable for mastery (optional).
- Click Choose Activity, and select the activity or activities that you want to make access dependent on.
- Check the Block access until student masters objective(s) box, click Choose Objective, and select the objective(s) you want to make access dependent on.
- Check the Block access until a specified date box and enter the desired date and time.
- This can also be managed in the Editor > Scheduling screen.
- Learn more: How does Buzz handle Due dates, Visibility dates, and Score release dates for students in different time zones?
- Check the Student must enter a password box, and enter the desired Activity password in the field.
- By default students must enter this password only once, and can access the activity without entering the password thereafter.
- If you want, you can check the Require password each visit to override the default.
- Note: Students can be excused from this setting for a specified amount of time by an administrator as part of their Accommodations. Overriding this setting for a student can be useful in a situation where passwords are provided during class, but a student is unable to attend for a period of time.
Badges
Click Choose Badge to select one or more badges that you want automatically awarded to students who successfully complete this activity.
Learn more:
Metadata
Admins can create custom Metadata fields for activities in their domain. This content is only visible to teachers, course authors, etc. and provides further insight into an activity, such as:
- An activity Description for course authors.
- An idea of how this activity fits into the goal of the course or the Big Picture.
- Essential Questions that should be answered by the activity or that students should keep in mind as they complete it.
- Any relevant Vocabulary.
- Associated Resources.
Some of the fields under Metadata ask for content that, if set up by your system admin, can be used to make an activity searchable in the Digital Library. Contact your system admin to find out if there are fields in your domain that can be used this way.
Advanced activity options
Manage Advanced activity options, like:
- Changing the activity's folder Location using the dropdown.
- Giving the activity a new Activity ID in the field.
History tab
The History tab records changes made to the activity and allows you to retrieve previous versions:
- Click the version you want to restore.
- Preview the content.
- Click Restore.
Buzz does not itemize changes to all settings, but does track them. Users can access them by clicking the Details link that appears at the bottom of the history table.
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