EMPOWERING EDUCATORS AT
COPENHAGEN BUSINESS SCHOOL
COPENHAGEN BUSINESS SCHOOL

Co-written by Nuria Lopez & Stefani Konstanta, Learning Consultants at CBS.
The very time-consuming task of creating multiple-choice questions (MCQs) can be greatly facilitated by Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) tools like Copilot. These tools can generate questions much faster than we can and this is certainly an advantage that most of us want to benefit from.
That said, the quality of GenAI-generated MCQs is not always where we would like it to be. Sometimes the questions are too basic, or the content is not quite accurate. This is why we have built on the original set of ready-made prompts and turned them into an AI-powered MCQ creation workflow — a 3-step process that combines evidence-based question design, AI-generated feedback, and an instant Canvas import option. These applications were themselves built with the help of AI tools and are designed to help you get better results while saving time.
A well-crafted prompt is the foundation of good AI-generated questions. The Multiple-Choice Prompt Generator lets you either:
Step 1
Choose a mode, complete the fields (or use the template), then copy the prompt into your AI tool. Please review the AI output before using it with students.
You are teaching a university course on [subject]. This is a [level/type, e.g., introductory, postgraduate] course.
Create [number] multiple-choice questions for students in this course. The questions must be about [topics/concepts], focusing specifically on [e.g., differences between X and Y; application of X; causes/consequences of Y; or subtopics].
Each question must have [3] alternatives labeled a–c: one correct answer and two distractors. Mark the correct alternative with an asterisk (*).
Write stems that:
• Address a single learning outcome
• Use clear, concise wording
• Avoid negative phrasing and ambiguous vocabulary
Write alternatives that:
• Are all plausible and similar in length
• Are parallel in grammar/structure
• Avoid repeating phrases from the stem
• Do not use “All of the above” or “None of the above”
Return the questions in this exact plain-text format:
• One blank line between items
• First line: “Q#. [stem]”
• Next lines: lettered options starting with “a) ” then “b) …”, etc.
• Put a single * at the end of the correct option line (e.g., “b) …*”)
• No explanations, feedback, or extra text
Example (3 options):
Q1. [your question here]
a) [option one]
b) [option two]*
c) [option three]
With your MCQs finalised, paste them into the Canvas QTI Converter. The tool automatically formats them into a QTI .zip file ready for import into Canvas — no manual retyping required.
Step 2
Paste your MCQs, click Parse & Preview, then export a QTI .zip for Canvas. Single correct answer only (exactly one * per item).
* at the end of the correct option.
Q1. Which metric shows item difficulty?
a) The proportion of students who chose each distractor
b) The proportion answering correctly*
c) The point-biserial correlation
Reformat the MCQs below into this exact plain-text layout (single correct answer per item): Rules: • One blank line between items. • First line: “Q#. [stem]”. • Options on their own lines, labelled a), b), c), … . • Put a single * at the end of the correct option line. • Keep the original wording; no explanations, feedback, or extra text. • Use straight quotes and standard punctuation. Return ONLY the reformatted items. [PASTE QUESTIONS HERE]
You can read this comprehensive Canvas page for more guidance on importing quizzes on Canvas through QTI packages.
AI can get you to a good set of MCQs quickly, but learning improves when students get immediate, targeted feedback—even (especially!) on wrong answers. Short, option-level comments help students correct misconceptions, build confidence, and remember why an answer works.
STEP 3
Copy the prompt below into your AI tool to generate short, option-level explanations you can paste into Canvas after importing your Quiz file.
Provide concise, option-level feedback for the following multiple-choice question(s): [paste question(s)]. Write 1–2 sentences of feedback for each option (a, b, c, …): • Say why the option is correct or incorrect. • Keep feedback specific to this question (no generic tips). • For incorrect options, explain the misconception without revealing the correct answer. • Use student-friendly, supportive language. • If the item is ambiguous or more than one option seems correct, briefly flag the issue.