When to Use AI Tools — and When to Rely on Your Mentor
A student asked me last week: “I know I shouldn’t write my dissertation with ChatGPT, but where’s the line? When is AI
helpful versus harmful? I’m confused about what’s okay.” This is exactly the right question. Because here’s the reality:
AI tools aren’t going away, and pretending they don’t exist isn’t practical. But treating AI as a substitute for human
mentorship will destroy your dissertation and possibly your academic career. The line is clearer than you might think:
AI can assist with mechanical tasks. Human mentors must guide intellectual work.
Let me show you exactly where that line is, why it matters, and how to navigate it successfully. Because used
appropriately, AI can save you time on tedious tasks—but only human mentorship develops the scholarly thinking that
makes dissertations succeed.
Before discussing specific uses, understand the core principle separating appropriate from inappropriate AI use.
What qualifies as mechanical:
What qualifies as intellectual:
Let me be specific about what’s appropriate, questionable, and unacceptable.
These uses are ethically sound and help efficiency without compromising intellectual integrity: 1. Grammar and spell-checking Appropriate use: Running your draft through Grammarly or asking ChatGPT “Is this sentence grammatically correct: [sentence YOU wrote]” Why it’s okay: You wrote the content. AI is just checking technical correctness—like a copyeditor would. Important: AI is checking YOUR writing, not generating content for you. 2. Citation formatting Appropriate use: “Format this citation in APA 7th edition: [citation information for source YOU found and read]” Why it’s okay: You found the source, read it, and decided to cite it. AI is just handling formatting mechanics. Important: Never ask AI to “find sources about [topic]”—that’s you not doing your literature search. 3. Search term brainstorming Appropriate use: “I’m researching teacher retention. What additional search terms should I consider?” Why it’s okay: AI suggests terms you might not think of. You still do the searching, reading, and evaluating. Important: You must understand terms before using them and verify results are relevant. 4. Synonym suggestions Appropriate use: “What’s another word for ‘mitigate’ that might be clearer?” Why it’s okay: You know what you mean. AI is helping find the right word—like a thesaurus. Important: Only use words you actually understand. Don’t use sophisticated terms you can’t define. 5. Table formatting Appropriate use: “Convert this data into APA-formatted table: [data YOU analyzed]” Why it’s okay: You did the analysis. AI is formatting output for presentation. Important: You must understand the data and analysis. AI is formatting, not interpreting.
These uses might be acceptable but require careful judgment: 1. Sentence clarity improvement Use case: “Make this sentence clearer: [sentence YOU wrote expressing YOUR idea]” Why it’s questionable: Where’s the line between clarity help and content generation? Proceed if:
These uses constitute academic dishonesty and will result in failure or dismissal: 1. Content generation NEVER APPROPRIATE: “Write my literature review about [topic]” or “Generate my problem statement” or “Write my methodology chapter” Why it’s dishonest: These sections require YOUR reasoning, YOUR synthesis, YOUR justification. Having AI generate them is plagiarism—presenting AI’s work as yours. Consequences: Proposal rejection, failure, possibly program dismissal for academic integrity violations 2. Research question formulation NEVER APPROPRIATE: “Based on this literature, what research questions should I ask?” Why it’s dishonest: Formulating meaningful research questions demonstrates doctoral-level thinking. If AI does this, you’re misrepresenting your capabilities. Consequences: You won’t be able to defend your questions or explain why they matter 3. Data analysis or interpretation NEVER APPROPRIATE: “Here’s my data. Identify themes/run analysis/interpret findings.” Why it’s dishonest: Analysis and interpretation are the core intellectual work of empirical research. Outsourcing them means you didn’t do the research. Consequences: You can’t defend your analysis or explain your reasoning. Possible research misconduct charges. 4. Theoretical framework selection or application NEVER APPROPRIATE: “Which theory should I use?” or “Apply this theory to my research” Why it’s dishonest: Theoretical reasoning is central to doctoral work. You must understand and justify theoretical choices. Consequences: Defense failure when you can’t explain theoretical connections 5. Citation without reading sources NEVER APPROPRIATE: “Summarize this article [PDF]” then citing the article based on AI’s summary without reading it yourself Why it’s dishonest: You’re claiming to have engaged with work you haven’t read. This is fabrication. Consequences: Committee catches you not knowing sources you cited. Academic integrity violation.
Now let me show you specifically when human mentorship is irreplaceable—where AI cannot substitute even if you’re tempted to try.
What’s needed: Analyzing patterns across literature to identify what’s genuinely missing and worth studying Why AI fails: AI describes what exists but cannot assess what’s missing or whether gaps matter What mentors provide:
What’s needed: Matching research methods to your specific questions, context, and constraints Why AI fails: AI describes methods generically but doesn’t understand epistemology, design logic, or feasibility assessment What mentors provide:
What’s needed: Making sense of what data mean theoretically and practically Why AI fails: AI can describe findings but cannot reason about theoretical implications or practical applications What mentors provide:
What’s needed: Building scholarly arguments that synthesize evidence and advance claims Why AI fails: AI describes but doesn’t argue. It lists points without constructing logical chains of reasoning. What mentors provide:
What’s needed: Preparing to explain and justify every research decision under questioning Why AI fails: AI can’t anticipate your committee’s questions or prepare you to think on your feet What mentors provide:
The most effective approach: use AI for mechanical efficiency while relying on mentors for intellectual development.
Step 1: Get intellectual guidance from your mentor Work with your mentor to:
Efficiency: AI saves time on mechanical tasks Quality: Mentor guidance ensures intellectual rigor Learning: You develop scholarly capabilities through mentor teaching Defense readiness: You understand your work because you did it with human guidance Integrity: Your work represents YOUR thinking, informed by mentorship
Even if AI becomes more sophisticated, human mentorship provides irreplaceable value.
Good mentors understand:
Expert mentors bring:
Mentors don’t just help you finish—they teach you to think like a scholar:
Mentors provide:
Don’t try to write your dissertation with ChatGPT when you need human expertise. Work with mentors who develop your scholarly capabilities.
When you work with us, you get mentorship AI cannot replicate: Strategic guidance: We help you identify viable research directions based on decades of field experience Methodological expertise: We teach you research design logic, not just describe methods Analytical training: We guide your data interpretation, ensuring rigor and depth Argument development: We teach you to construct scholarly arguments that convince committees Defense preparation: We prepare you to defend every decision under questioning Career development: We position your work to support your post-PhD career goals Get dissertation mentorship from scholars who develop your thinking, not just help you produce documents.
We embrace appropriate technology while maintaining intellectual integrity: We teach you to use AI ethically: Showing you exactly where AI can help and where it undermines your work We guide your intellectual development: Ensuring you understand your dissertation deeply enough to defend it confidently We prepare you for success: Not just graduation, but for careers requiring scholarly capabilities We maintain standards: Upholding the integrity of doctoral work while helping you work efficiently
Get comprehensive dissertation help that combines efficient use of available tools with irreplaceable human mentorship.
AI tools can help with mechanical tasks—formatting, grammar, search term brainstorming. But they cannot provide the intellectual guidance and scholarly teaching that doctoral work requires. Use AI for:
The Fundamental Distinction: Mechanical vs. Intellectual
Before discussing specific uses, understand the core principle separating appropriate from inappropriate AI use.
Mechanical Tasks: Where AI Can Help
What qualifies as mechanical:
- Tasks that don’t require judgment, reasoning, or original thinking
- Tasks where correctness can be objectively verified
- Tasks that save time without replacing intellectual work
- Tasks where AI assists YOUR process rather than doing your thinking
- Formatting references according to APA rules
- Catching grammatical errors in text YOU wrote
- Suggesting search term synonyms for database queries
- Converting statistical output to formatted tables
- Checking whether documents meet formatting requirements
Intellectual Tasks: Where Mentors Are Essential
What qualifies as intellectual:
- Tasks requiring reasoning, judgment, or scholarly expertise
- Tasks where multiple approaches exist and selection requires wisdom
- Tasks where your thinking is the actual work product
- Tasks where understanding matters more than output
- Identifying meaningful research gaps
- Selecting appropriate theoretical frameworks
- Justifying methodological choices
- Interpreting data and findings
- Constructing scholarly arguments
- Defending research decisions
AI Use Cases: The Green, Yellow, and Red Zones
Let me be specific about what’s appropriate, questionable, and unacceptable.
Green Zone: Clearly Appropriate AI Use
These uses are ethically sound and help efficiency without compromising intellectual integrity: 1. Grammar and spell-checking Appropriate use: Running your draft through Grammarly or asking ChatGPT “Is this sentence grammatically correct: [sentence YOU wrote]” Why it’s okay: You wrote the content. AI is just checking technical correctness—like a copyeditor would. Important: AI is checking YOUR writing, not generating content for you. 2. Citation formatting Appropriate use: “Format this citation in APA 7th edition: [citation information for source YOU found and read]” Why it’s okay: You found the source, read it, and decided to cite it. AI is just handling formatting mechanics. Important: Never ask AI to “find sources about [topic]”—that’s you not doing your literature search. 3. Search term brainstorming Appropriate use: “I’m researching teacher retention. What additional search terms should I consider?” Why it’s okay: AI suggests terms you might not think of. You still do the searching, reading, and evaluating. Important: You must understand terms before using them and verify results are relevant. 4. Synonym suggestions Appropriate use: “What’s another word for ‘mitigate’ that might be clearer?” Why it’s okay: You know what you mean. AI is helping find the right word—like a thesaurus. Important: Only use words you actually understand. Don’t use sophisticated terms you can’t define. 5. Table formatting Appropriate use: “Convert this data into APA-formatted table: [data YOU analyzed]” Why it’s okay: You did the analysis. AI is formatting output for presentation. Important: You must understand the data and analysis. AI is formatting, not interpreting.
Yellow Zone: Proceed With Caution
These uses might be acceptable but require careful judgment: 1. Sentence clarity improvement Use case: “Make this sentence clearer: [sentence YOU wrote expressing YOUR idea]” Why it’s questionable: Where’s the line between clarity help and content generation? Proceed if:
- The original idea and content are genuinely yours
- You could explain the concept without AI’s help
- You’re improving expression of YOUR thinking, not having AI think for you
- You could defend the reasoning if questioned
- You don’t understand what the sentence means
- AI is generating new ideas or arguments
- You’re using AI to make vague ideas sound sophisticated
- The content and ideas are entirely yours
- You understand why AI’s suggested structure makes sense
- You could have organized it yourself with more time/effort
- You’re getting organizational suggestions for YOUR ideas, not having AI generate the outline
- AI is determining what content should be included
- You don’t understand why the organization works
- AI’s structure changes your arguments substantially
- You’ve already done substantial searching yourself
- You understand your field well enough to evaluate AI suggestions
- You’re getting supplementary search ideas, not outsourcing searching
- You critically evaluate all sources found through AI suggestions
- You haven’t done your own searching first
- You’re relying on AI to determine what’s relevant
- You cite sources without reading them because AI suggested them
Red Zone: Never Appropriate
These uses constitute academic dishonesty and will result in failure or dismissal: 1. Content generation NEVER APPROPRIATE: “Write my literature review about [topic]” or “Generate my problem statement” or “Write my methodology chapter” Why it’s dishonest: These sections require YOUR reasoning, YOUR synthesis, YOUR justification. Having AI generate them is plagiarism—presenting AI’s work as yours. Consequences: Proposal rejection, failure, possibly program dismissal for academic integrity violations 2. Research question formulation NEVER APPROPRIATE: “Based on this literature, what research questions should I ask?” Why it’s dishonest: Formulating meaningful research questions demonstrates doctoral-level thinking. If AI does this, you’re misrepresenting your capabilities. Consequences: You won’t be able to defend your questions or explain why they matter 3. Data analysis or interpretation NEVER APPROPRIATE: “Here’s my data. Identify themes/run analysis/interpret findings.” Why it’s dishonest: Analysis and interpretation are the core intellectual work of empirical research. Outsourcing them means you didn’t do the research. Consequences: You can’t defend your analysis or explain your reasoning. Possible research misconduct charges. 4. Theoretical framework selection or application NEVER APPROPRIATE: “Which theory should I use?” or “Apply this theory to my research” Why it’s dishonest: Theoretical reasoning is central to doctoral work. You must understand and justify theoretical choices. Consequences: Defense failure when you can’t explain theoretical connections 5. Citation without reading sources NEVER APPROPRIATE: “Summarize this article [PDF]” then citing the article based on AI’s summary without reading it yourself Why it’s dishonest: You’re claiming to have engaged with work you haven’t read. This is fabrication. Consequences: Committee catches you not knowing sources you cited. Academic integrity violation.
When You Need Your Mentor: The Essential Guidance Moments
Now let me show you specifically when human mentorship is irreplaceable—where AI cannot substitute even if you’re tempted to try.
Moment 1: Identifying Research Gaps
What’s needed: Analyzing patterns across literature to identify what’s genuinely missing and worth studying Why AI fails: AI describes what exists but cannot assess what’s missing or whether gaps matter What mentors provide:
- Field knowledge to recognize understudied areas
- Judgment about which gaps are meaningful versus trivial
- Strategic thinking about gaps you can feasibly fill
- Understanding of what your committee will view as original
Moment 2: Selecting Methodologies
What’s needed: Matching research methods to your specific questions, context, and constraints Why AI fails: AI describes methods generically but doesn’t understand epistemology, design logic, or feasibility assessment What mentors provide:
- Understanding of what different methods can and cannot reveal
- Judgment about which methods fit your questions
- Assessment of what’s feasible given your constraints
- Preparation for defending methodological choices
Moment 3: Interpreting Findings
What’s needed: Making sense of what data mean theoretically and practically Why AI fails: AI can describe findings but cannot reason about theoretical implications or practical applications What mentors provide:
- Theoretical knowledge to connect findings to existing frameworks
- Field expertise to assess whether findings are surprising or expected
- Judgment about what findings mean for practice or policy
- Guidance on avoiding overinterpretation or underinterpretation
Moment 4: Constructing Arguments
What’s needed: Building scholarly arguments that synthesize evidence and advance claims Why AI fails: AI describes but doesn’t argue. It lists points without constructing logical chains of reasoning. What mentors provide:
- Modeling of how to build arguments from evidence
- Feedback on logical gaps or unsupported claims
- Guidance on acknowledging alternative interpretations
- Teaching how to position yourself in scholarly debates
Moment 5: Defending Your Work
What’s needed: Preparing to explain and justify every research decision under questioning Why AI fails: AI can’t anticipate your committee’s questions or prepare you to think on your feet What mentors provide:
- Mock defense practice with questions committees will actually ask
- Feedback on your reasoning and explanations
- Guidance on handling challenges to your decisions
- Preparation for discussing limitations without defensiveness
How to Use Both AI and Mentors Strategically
The most effective approach: use AI for mechanical efficiency while relying on mentors for intellectual development.
The Strategic Workflow
Step 1: Get intellectual guidance from your mentor Work with your mentor to:
- Identify meaningful research gaps
- Select appropriate theories and methods
- Develop research questions
- Design data collection procedures
- Plan analysis approaches
- Conduct literature searches and read sources
- Collect and analyze data
- Interpret findings
- Draft content expressing YOUR thinking
- Check grammar in content YOU wrote
- Format citations for sources YOU read
- Create tables from data YOU analyzed
- Generate alternative search terms for additional searches
- Assessment of reasoning quality
- Feedback on argumentation
- Identification of gaps or weaknesses
- Guidance on improvements
- Strengthen arguments
- Add missing justifications
- Clarify reasoning
- Improve synthesis
What This Workflow Achieves
Efficiency: AI saves time on mechanical tasks Quality: Mentor guidance ensures intellectual rigor Learning: You develop scholarly capabilities through mentor teaching Defense readiness: You understand your work because you did it with human guidance Integrity: Your work represents YOUR thinking, informed by mentorship
Why Mentors Cannot Be Replaced by AI
Even if AI becomes more sophisticated, human mentorship provides irreplaceable value.
Mentors Know You
Good mentors understand:
- Your strengths and areas needing development
- Your learning style and what types of guidance you need
- Your specific program’s requirements and culture
- Your career goals and how your dissertation supports them
Mentors Know Your Field
Expert mentors bring:
- Decades of field expertise AI cannot replicate
- Understanding of what your specific committee values
- Knowledge of current debates and emerging directions
- Connections and professional insights benefiting your career
Mentors Teach Scholarly Thinking
Mentors don’t just help you finish—they teach you to think like a scholar:
- How to evaluate evidence critically
- How to construct rigorous arguments
- How to position yourself in scholarly conversations
- How to handle intellectual challenges
Mentors Hold You Accountable
Mentors provide:
- Motivation and encouragement through difficult phases
- Accountability for progress and deadlines
- Perspective when you’re overwhelmed or discouraged
- Celebration of milestones and achievements
Get the Right Kind of Mentorship
Don’t try to write your dissertation with ChatGPT when you need human expertise. Work with mentors who develop your scholarly capabilities.
What Real Professors Provide
When you work with us, you get mentorship AI cannot replicate: Strategic guidance: We help you identify viable research directions based on decades of field experience Methodological expertise: We teach you research design logic, not just describe methods Analytical training: We guide your data interpretation, ensuring rigor and depth Argument development: We teach you to construct scholarly arguments that convince committees Defense preparation: We prepare you to defend every decision under questioning Career development: We position your work to support your post-PhD career goals Get dissertation mentorship from scholars who develop your thinking, not just help you produce documents.
Our Balanced Approach
We embrace appropriate technology while maintaining intellectual integrity: We teach you to use AI ethically: Showing you exactly where AI can help and where it undermines your work We guide your intellectual development: Ensuring you understand your dissertation deeply enough to defend it confidently We prepare you for success: Not just graduation, but for careers requiring scholarly capabilities We maintain standards: Upholding the integrity of doctoral work while helping you work efficiently
Complete Dissertation Support
Get comprehensive dissertation help that combines efficient use of available tools with irreplaceable human mentorship.
The Bottom Line: Tools Assist, Mentors Teach
AI tools can help with mechanical tasks—formatting, grammar, search term brainstorming. But they cannot provide the intellectual guidance and scholarly teaching that doctoral work requires. Use AI for:
- Grammar checking
- Citation formatting
- Search term suggestions
- Table formatting
- Synonyms and word choice (for concepts you understand)
- Identifying meaningful research gaps
- Selecting appropriate methodologies
- Interpreting findings
- Constructing scholarly arguments
- Defending research decisions
- Developing as a scholar