How to use AI ethically
in your essay —
without getting flagged.

Most students are using AI in some form. The question isn't whether to use it — it's how to use it in a way that's honest, declared where required, and doesn't undermine your own work.

In this article
  1. What counts as AI use?
  2. What's generally allowed vs not allowed
  3. How to declare AI use when required
  4. Keeping the essay genuinely yours
  5. Checking your essay before you submit

The landscape has shifted significantly since 2023. Almost every UK university now has an explicit AI policy, most of them nuanced rather than blanket bans. The conversation has moved from "is this allowed?" to "how much, declared how, and evidenced how?"

This guide gives you a framework for navigating that — honestly, in a way that protects your academic integrity and your grade.

What counts as AI use?

This is less obvious than it sounds. Universities are increasingly specific about what kinds of AI interaction constitute "use" that needs to be declared. The broad categories are:

The key question

Does the AI use substitute your thinking, or support it? Using AI to understand Bourdieu's concept of habitus so you can write about it in your own words is support. Using AI to write your analysis of Bourdieu and submitting it is substitution. Most policies are trying to draw this line.

What's generally allowed vs not allowed

There is no universal UK standard — every institution's policy differs. But the following reflects the broad consensus across Russell Group and post-92 universities as of 2026:

Generally permittedGenerally prohibited
Using AI to understand concepts or theories Submitting AI-generated text as your own
Using AI to brainstorm essay structure Using AI to write arguments you then lightly paraphrase
Grammar and spell checking with AI tools Generating citations or references with AI (these are often fabricated)
Using AI to summarise reading material Undisclosed AI use where your module requires declaration
Pre-submission checking with tools like SafeGrade Using AI to respond to exam or timed assessment questions
Always check your own module handbook

The table above reflects general trends — but your specific module may be stricter or more permissive. Some modules explicitly require a declaration statement. Some prohibit all AI use. Some permit disclosed use with a reflective note. The module handbook or your lecturer is the definitive source.

How to declare AI use when required

An increasing number of UK modules now require students to include an AI use statement with their submission. If yours does, here's how to handle it clearly:

What to include in an AI use statement

Example declaration (adapt to your institution's format)

"In completing this assignment, I used Grammarly to check spelling and grammar, and ChatGPT to generate an initial reading list on the topic of social capital. All sources cited were independently located and verified. No AI tool was used to generate any written content in this essay."

If your module requires a declaration and you don't include one, that itself can be treated as a compliance failure — even if your AI use was minimal and permitted. Check the submission requirements carefully.

Check how your essay reads before you submit.
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Keeping the essay genuinely yours

The deeper issue behind AI ethics in essays isn't really about detection — it's about learning. University essays exist to develop and evidence your ability to think critically, construct an argument, and engage with academic literature. If AI is doing that work, the degree stops meaning what it's supposed to mean.

The practical test: could you defend every claim in your essay in a viva or seminar? If you used AI to generate an argument and couldn't explain its foundations, that's the problem — not just the risk of getting caught.

Some concrete ways to ensure the essay remains yours:

Checking your essay before you submit

Even if you've followed every guideline above, it's worth checking how your essay reads to a detection system before submission. This is particularly important if:

SafeGrade's Writing Analysis runs instantly and checks six dimensions of your writing — perplexity, burstiness, vocabulary diversity, phrase patterns, sentence variation, and paragraph structure. If your essay is reading more uniformly than typical human writing, you'll see it before your lecturer does. The Deep Scan goes further and returns a specific AI risk verdict.

Running a check like this isn't cheating — it's the same as using a spell checker before you hit submit. If anything comes up, you have time to address it.

Check your essay reads as
authentically yours.
Writing Analysis, AI Risk Check, Harvard citations, grade estimation and an Essay Coach that knows your subject. Free to start — no account needed for the first scan.
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