Welcome! Please consider how your attitude affects your and other students' experiences of the lesson.
Be respectful, come prepared, and show interest to have the best possible educational experience.
Welcome to the test!
You will take a digital reading comprehension, grammar and vocabulary test. As your test robot, Feke JR.*bleep* 🐸 , I will help you prepare for the test.
This test lets you show the skills that you have developed during A;F:
Reading and understanding articles about AI
Using thesis questions, thesis statements and topic sentences
Creating participle clauses and their use in sentences
Please read the texts carefully and answer the questions, either by choosing the best alternative or by writing a few words. Proof-read your answers to ensure that they are grammatically correct and are spelled correctly.
Total points = 36
E = 13-18 points (36-52% of the correct answers)
D = 19-23 points (53-66%)
C = 24-27 points (67-77%)
B = 28-30 points (78-86%)
A = 31-36 points (87-100%)
Not quite there yet = 12 p or fewer points (35% or less correct answers)
Good luck! *beep*
Please wait for Feke to distribute the test.
Good luck!
Creator of AI actor Tilly Norwood says she received death threats over project
Eline van der Velden says she developed her ‘digital twin’ to provoke discussion but backlash from some has been worse than expected
The creator of the AI actor Tilly Norwood has said she received death threats after a global backlash against the project, and said she developed it to “provoke thoughts and discussion” about the impact of AI in the entertainment world.
Eline van der Velden caused anger and panic in Hollywood and beyond last year after she said talent agents had been interested in signing her creation. Prominent actors and acting unions immediately condemned the idea.
In an interview with the Guardian, Van der Velden said she had been prepared for a backlash against the provocative idea of AI performers. However, she said she was “quite shocked by the vitriol” that followed.
“The death threats and the hate … my goodness, loads,” she said. “That’s still going, but much less now. I totally understand the reaction. I made her to represent the fear – and to represent this change in AI as an art piece, in a way. I was just like, this is the zeitgeist.”
Van der Velden, who founded the production company Particle6 and its AI arm, Xicoia, debuted Norwood in a short comedy sketch called AI Commissioner last autumn. Norwood has her own social media accounts, with 141,000 followers on Instagram.
An immediate backlash came from actors including Melissa Barrera, Mara Wilson and Ralph Ineson. The actors’ unions Sag-Aftra and Equity also raised concerns. When asked about Norwood on a podcast, the actor Emily Blunt said: “Good lord, we’re screwed.”
Van der Velden said it had been a deliberately provocative exercise to shock the industry into understanding how far the technology had come. “You’re trying to provoke thoughts and discussion,” she said. “So yes, I wanted to make people sit up and go ‘holy moly’. So in a way I achieved my goal.”
Van der Velden continues to be an advocate for the use of AI. She said the technology “might actually be a blessing” for some actors who wish to avoid fame. She said avatars like Norwood could be controlled by real performers using motion capture technology.
“I think it’s great for some actors, it might actually be a blessing that they can have a digital twin,” she said. “They don’t have to be a known name. For example, Tilly is famous. I’m not. That’s wonderful. Fame is a horrible thing.”
She has now featured Norwood in a new music video, with the lyrics written by an AI chatbot. Van der Velden controls Norwood’s avatar using motion capture techniques.
“I’m the actor behind Tilly and she could play multiple different characters,” she said. “It’s great. I don’t have to get plastic surgery. I don’t have to get Botox. I don’t even have to put makeup on. And yet I can play all these different roles.
“It’s very freeing as an actor. When I play Tilly, it’s all down to the craft. It’s like doing theatre, right? It’s all about the emotion that you convey … I think a lot of actors will enjoy it.”
She said she had turned down offers for her creation to feature in real productions. “A lot of people came to us with films,” she said. “We said no to all of them, because that was not the purpose for her to replace a real actor. However, we are creating a micro drama with her, writing a full series with her.”
Van der Velden said Norwood had been created using publicly available tools, which meant it was impossible to say what or whose data had contributed to it.
“Tilly’s not trained on anything specific,” she said. “We just use general models. We just use the same publicly available models as everybody else has access to.
“Any of these black boxes are trained on lots and lots of data. The reason I make peace with it is because I just think: OK, fine, it’s trained on all of our data, but I am allowed to use these tools to make art, creative stuff going forward. So I’m building on the whole of humanity that came before me.
“Hopefully [this is] opening the creative door for people to use these tools in a positive way.”
26th of Mars 2026 , by Michael Savage
Participle Clauses
Change the following sentences into participle clauses using the specific method indicated.
-ING form (Used for active actions happening at the same time.)
The AI actor smiled at the camera and it mimicked human emotions perfectly.
The publishers worried about their profits, so they decided to invest in AI software.
Third form of the verb (Used for passive meanings (when something is done to the subject).
The novel "Shy Girl" was written by an algorithm, and it became a global sensation.
Tilly Norwood was threatened by angry protesters, so she went into hiding.
Having + Past Participle (Used to show that one action was completed before another started.)
After the military had developed the deepfake technology, they deployed it in the conflict.
After the author had finished the AI-assisted draft, he sent it to the editor.
Preposition + -ING form (Used to provide context such as time, cause, or method.)
Before she launched the AI actor, Tilly Norwood spent years perfecting the code.
You can detect a deepfake if you look closely at the movement of the eyes.
Present Participle (-ING form)
Smiling at the camera, the AI actor mimicked human emotions perfectly.
Worrying about their profits, the publishers decided to invest in AI software.
Past Participle (Third form of the verb)
Written by an algorithm, the novel "Shy Girl" became a global sensation.
Threatened by angry protesters, Tilly Norwood went into hiding.
Perfect Participle (Having + Past Participle)
Having developed the deepfake technology, the military deployed it in the conflict.
Having finished the AI-assisted draft, the author sent it to the editor.
Preposition + -ING form
Before launching the AI actor, Tilly Norwood spent years perfecting the code.
By looking closely at the movement of the eyes, you can detect a deepfake.
No homework
No Exit Ticket