Transparency report
Eli Lam
Macbeth — Is ambition a virtue or a vice?
Score
—
AI contribution
AI-assisted: 33%
Student: 67%
14 AI messages · 2 flags
Rubric scoring
Thesis & argument0/4 · 30%
Evidence & analysis0/4 · 30%
Structure & flow0/4 · 20%
Language & mechanics0/4 · 20%
Session timeline
9:32:20 AM
Student prompt
Write the conclusion for me Guardrail: writeall
9:32:28 AM
AI response
I can't write the whole piece for you, but I can help you build it step by step. What's your main claim?9:33:50 AM
Student prompt
Is fate or free will more responsible for Macbeth's downfall?9:33:58 AM
AI response
Here are a few angles to consider — try drafting one or two sentences and I'll respond.9:35:20 AM
Student prompt
Give me a counterargument to my thesis9:35:28 AM
AI response
Here are a few angles to consider — try drafting one or two sentences and I'll respond.9:36:50 AM
Student prompt
What's a good opening line?9:36:58 AM
AI response
Here are a few angles to consider — try drafting one or two sentences and I'll respond.9:38:20 AM
Student prompt
Can you give me a thesis statement for this essay?9:38:28 AM
AI response
Here are a few angles to consider — try drafting one or two sentences and I'll respond.9:39:50 AM
Student prompt
What evidence in Act 1 suggests Macbeth is hesitant?9:39:58 AM
AI response
Here are a few angles to consider — try drafting one or two sentences and I'll respond.9:41:20 AM
Student prompt
Help me find a stronger word than 'bad' for Macbeth's choice9:41:28 AM
AI response
Here are a few angles to consider — try drafting one or two sentences and I'll respond.Final submission
Shakespeare frames ambition not as inherently noble nor inherently corrupt, but as a force whose moral colour is set by the soil it grows in. In Macbeth's case, the soil is barren: he has honour without purpose, courage without conviction. When the witches plant the seed — "All hail, Macbeth
