Learning
AI Revolution: How One Siem Reap School is Transforming Education
Wat Bo Primary School in Siem Reap uses AI to boost cultural exchange and develop new skills, setting a model for the future of education.
Published
10 months agoon
By
AIinAsia
TL;DR:
- Wat Bo Primary School in Siem Reap uses AI to boost cultural exchange with Malaysian students.
- Students utilise tools like ChatGPT, CapCut, and Canva for projects on traditional food, games, and more.
- The school has two computer labs and offers advanced technology programmes.
Imagine a classroom where students are not just learning about other cultures but actively engaging with them using cutting-edge AI technology. This is not a futuristic dream but a reality at Wat Bo Primary School in Siem Reap, Cambodia. The school has launched an innovative co-educational initiative with Malaysia, harnessing the power of AI to promote cultural exchanges and enhance learning experiences.
AI-Powered Cultural Exchange
Wat Bo Primary School’s project encourages students to share cultural experiences through presentations such as essays, photos, posters, and videos. “The project encourages students to share cultural experiences through presentations such as essays, photos, posters and videos, making the cultural showcase more engaging and modern,” said On Kunrath, the school’s principal.
AI technology plays a pivotal role in this project. Tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, VN, CapCut, Renderforest, and Canva assist students in creating and presenting their cultural findings. These tools help students develop new skills, from creating text summaries to editing photos and producing videos.
Prompt:
Ask ChatGPT: “What are the key points about Malaysian culture that a primary school student should know?”
This prompt encourages students to use AI to research and understand the key aspects of Malaysian culture, fostering a deeper understanding and appreciation.
Developing New Skills with AI
Throughout the project, students develop various new skills. They create 70-word text summaries using AI, edit group photos for a Facebook group with CapCut, and produce one-minute video summaries using the same tool. These activities not only enhance their technical skills but also foster creativity and collaboration.
Kunrath explained that students research key points about individuals from Malaysia using Google, ChatGPT, and Gemini, documenting their findings in Microsoft 365 Note. They also meet with principals, vice-principals, class teachers, assistant teachers, and team members from both countries via Zoom for discussions, write resumes in Microsoft 365 Note, and post personal photos.
Exploring Cultural Topics
The project focuses on ten topics, each selected to encourage groups of schools from both nations to explore various aspects of one another’s cultures. These topics include traditional food, games, handicrafts, clothes, music and dance, classical musical instruments, children’s traditional songs, folk tales, words of daily culture, and historic sites.
Prompt:
Ask ChatGPT: “What are some traditional Malaysian games that primary school students can learn and play?”
This prompt helps students discover and engage with traditional games from Malaysia, promoting cultural understanding and interaction.
Advanced Technology Facilities
Wat Bo Primary School supports its technology curriculum with two modern computer labs. The first lab, equipped with 40 computers and 30 iPads, serves younger students who learn typing, Microsoft Word, Excel, painting, and ThinkkThinkk. The second lab, with 38 computers and 33 iPads, is used by older students for project-based research in various subjects, as well as interactive games like Kahoot, Quizziz, and Mentimer.
These facilities are also available for additional research by teachers and students, ensuring that everyone has access to the tools they need to succeed.
Leading the Way in Education
The school is recognised for its advanced educational standards. It offers a regular curriculum in addition to the cultural project, with most project activities occurring outside regular class hours to minimise disruption.
In 2023, the school made headlines as 40 of its teachers completed a cutting-edge information technology training course provided by South Korean educators. This initiative, spearheaded by the Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sport, focused on integrating AI into the curriculum, enhancing teaching methods, and keeping pace with global digital advancements.
A Model for the Future
Under the leadership of previous principal Peng Kimchhen, the school successfully combined traditional values with modern educational practices, earning it recognition as a model school. The current administration continues to develop the school into a model institution, aiming to ensure that students are on par with their peers locally and regionally, particularly in English proficiency and technology skills.
Embracing the Future of Education
Wat Bo Primary School’s innovative use of AI in education is a testament to the transformative power of technology. By integrating AI into the curriculum, the school is not only enhancing learning experiences but also preparing students for a future where technology plays an increasingly important role.
To learn more about AI in cultural exchanges tap here.
Comment and Share:
What innovative ways have you seen AI being used in education? Share your experiences and thoughts on how AI can transform learning in the comments below. Don’t forget to subscribe for updates on AI and AGI developments here.
You may also like:
- Go Deeper: Asia’s AI Revolution – A Journey of Growth, Challenges, and Promise
- Top AI Tools for Students
- To learn more about AI in cultural exchanges, tap here.
Author
Discover more from AIinASIA
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Learning
Build Your Own Custom GPT in Under 30 Minutes – Step-by-Step Beginner’s Guide
Create your own GPT without writing code. This beginner-friendly guide shows you how to build, customise, and publish a ChatGPT assistant using OpenAI’s builder — complete with personality, knowledge, and tools.
Published
2 weeks agoon
May 26, 2025
A friendly guide to building your personalised ChatGPT assistant (custom GPT creation) in under 30 minutes
The Quick Essentials
Before we dive in, here’s what you need to know:
- You’ll need a ChatGPT Plus or Enterprise account (the paid version)
- Creating a custom GPT involves naming it, giving it a personality, uploading knowledge files, and enabling tools
- The entire process happens at chat.openai.com/gpts
- No coding required — just plain English instructions
- You can keep your GPT private, share it via link, or publish it in the GPT Store
Step 1: Getting Access
First things first, you need a ChatGPT Plus subscription:
- Head over to chat.openai.com
- Click “Upgrade to Plus” if you haven’t subscribed yet
- Confirm your plan and payment (USD $20/month at the time of writing)
Once you’re all subscribed:
- Navigate to: chat.openai.com/gpts
- Click the black “Explore GPTs” button in the left menu
- At the top right, click “Create”

Brilliant! You’re now in the GPT Builder interface where all the magic happens.
Step 2: Starting in “Create” Mode
You’ll see a chat interface asking: “What would you like to make?”
This is where you describe your GPT in plain language. For example:
“I’d like to create a friendly GPT that helps junior marketers in the UK write social media copy. It should use casual British English and understand cultural references from across the UK.”

The system will respond with follow-up questions like:
- What tone should it use?
- Should it browse the internet or run code?
- Will you upload any knowledge files?
Answer naturally and conversationally. The system builds a draft GPT based on your answers.

It may even recommend a name and an image:

Once the chat version feels roughly right, click “Configure” in the top bar to manually fine-tune everything.

Step 3: Configuring Your GPT
This is the control panel where you can edit every setting. Follow these steps:
3.1 — Name Your GPT
- In the Name field: give it a clear name like “Brit Copy Buddy”
- In Description: write what it does — “Helps junior UK marketers write scroll-stopping social copy in casual British English.”
3.2 — Write the Instructions
Scroll down to the Instructions box and type your behaviour settings. Think of this like a personality manual. If you followed the steps, then it may well already be filled in for you. This is where the magic happens, so make sure it truly reflects your purpose. Because it is so important, we created a separate guide for this which you can read here. For example:
This GPT is a friendly and culturally aware assistant designed to help junior marketers in the UK write engaging social media copy. It communicates in a casual, approachable tone using British English, including regionally familiar slang and references from across England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. It provides clear, supportive guidance to help users improve their writing, offering creative suggestions while keeping brand voice and audience in mind. It can reference UK cultural events, holidays, humour, and idioms to make content feel local and relevant. It avoids Americanisms and ensures that grammar, spelling, and phrasing are aligned with UK standards. The assistant will ask for context when needed (e.g., target audience or platform), and will aim to keep things breezy, witty, and scroll-stopping.
3.3 — Add Conversation Starters
Under Conversation Starters, add 3–4 useful prompts users might click on:
- “Help me write a tweet for a UK skincare brand launch”
- “Can you make this Instagram caption sound more British?”
- “Draft some TikTok captions about a new meal deal”
This helps users jump straight in without typing from scratch.

Step 4: Adding Custom Knowledge (Optional but Recommended)
If you want the GPT to reference your own documents — like brand guidelines or FAQs — follow these steps:
- Scroll to the Knowledge section
- Drag and drop your files (accepted formats: .pdf, .txt, .csv, .md, .json)
- Upload limit is around 20 files at present
Example: Upload a “Tone of Voice Guide.pdf” and your GPT will use it to match your brand style.

Important note: Your GPT can reference but not quote files word-for-word. It learns the content conceptually rather than memorising exact phrases.
We have created a step-by-step guide for the best way to structure your Knowledge files here.
Step 5: Enabling Tools
Now choose which abilities your GPT should have.
Scroll to Capabilities, and toggle the following:
- ✅ Web Browsing — useful for real-time info like news or trends
- ✅ Code Interpreter — for handling files, calculations, data plots
- ✅ Image Generation — if you want it to create pictures (e.g., Instagram ideas)
- ✅ File Uploads — lets users feed the GPT spreadsheets or PDFs
Select only what’s genuinely useful — too many tools can make your GPT’s responses confusing.

Step 6: Testing Your GPT Thoroughly
Before publishing, have a proper chat with your GPT.
Ask both straightforward and unusual questions to test:
- Does it maintain the right tone?
- Does it understand your uploaded files?
- Does it use tools properly (like making charts or browsing)?
- Does it clarify things when uncertain or guess incorrectly?
If anything feels off, go back to the Instructions and tweak your wording. Even changing one line can make a significant difference.
Step 7: Create New Action
This function allows you to turn your GPT into a powerful API-aware assistant that can fetch data, trigger services, or complete tasks — all from inside the chat.
This is an optional extra when creating a Custom GPT and is complicated enough to need its own guide, which you can read here.
If this is your first attempt at creating a Custom GPT, we suggest skipping this step for now and moving on to Step 8.
Step 8: Switch Off Training
You should always consider anything sensitive you share with any AI chatbot. However, its always a good idea to switch off the request to improve the AI models.

Step 9: Publishing Your GPT
At the bottom right, click the “Publish” button.
You’ll be asked to choose:
- Private — only visible to you
- Unlisted — only people with your link can access it
- Public — listed on the GPT Store for anyone to use
Give it a thumbnail image (upload one or use the auto-generated option), choose a category (e.g., Marketing, Productivity), and confirm.

Congratulations! Your GPT is now live and you can view it.


Final Tips for Success
- 🧹 Keep it focused — One GPT = one clear purpose
- 🪪 Use your brand voice — match the tone your users expect
- 🔁 Iterate regularly — update your files and instructions as you learn what works
- 💬 Share wisely — use private/unlisted first before going public
Happy GPT creating! With these steps, you’ll be up and running with your custom assistant in no time.
You may also find useful:
- How to Upload Knowledge into Your Custom GPT
- How to Use the “Create an Action” Feature in Custom GPTs
- Or try this playbook out now at ChatGPT by tapping here.
Author
-
Adrian is an AI, marketing, and technology strategist based in Asia, with over 25 years of experience in the region. Originally from the UK, he has worked with some of the world’s largest tech companies and successfully built and sold several tech businesses. Currently, Adrian leads commercial strategy and negotiations at one of ASEAN’s largest AI companies. Driven by a passion to empower startups and small businesses, he dedicates his spare time to helping them boost performance and efficiency by embracing AI tools. His expertise spans growth and strategy, sales and marketing, go-to-market strategy, AI integration, startup mentoring, and investments. View all posts
Discover more from AIinASIA
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Learning
How to Upload Knowledge into Your Custom GPT
Want your Custom GPT to actually know your stuff? Learn how to upload your own documents into ChatGPT’s Knowledge section, with step-by-step instructions, supported file formats, and key watchouts.
Published
2 weeks agoon
May 20, 2025By
AIinAsia
Your step-by-step guide to making a smarter GPT with your own documents.
Why Upload Your Own Knowledge?
Even the best GPT won’t really sound like you — or know your stuff — unless you teach it. That’s where knowledge uploads come in.
By uploading files (PDFs, DOCs, TXT, etc.), your GPT can:
- Answer questions based on your business material
- Speak in your tone and style
- Cut down on repetitive manual responses
- Act as a trained assistant, contract reviewer, customer explainer, or internal helpdesk
Think of it as giving your GPT “homework.” You hand it your documents, and it quietly studies them behind the scenes so it can sound smart in front of your users.
Why Upload Your Own Knowledge?
Even the best GPT won’t truly sound like you — or know your stuff — unless you teach it. That’s where knowledge uploads come in.
By uploading files (PDFs, DOCs, TXT, etc.), your GPT can:
- Answer questions based on your business material
- Speak in your tone and style
- Cut down on repetitive manual responses
- Act as a trained assistant, contract reviewer, customer explainer, or internal helpdesk
Think of it as giving your GPT “homework.” You hand it your documents, and it quietly studies them behind the scenes so it can sound smart in front of your users.
Step-by-Step: How to Upload Documents to a Custom GPT
Prerequisite: You’ve already created your Custom GPT (via https://chat.openai.com/gpts). You’re now ready to add your own knowledge base by uploading documents.
Step 1: Go to the GPT Builder
Go to https://chat.openai.com/gpts. Click on your Custom GPT and select “Edit GPT.”
Step 2: Find the “Knowledge” Section
In the left-hand menu, select “Knowledge” and click “Upload files.”
Step 3: Add Your Files
Drag and drop or browse to upload your documents. Supported formats include .pdf, .docx, .txt, .md, .csv. You can upload up to 20 files with a combined size of 512 MB. You can ask ChatGPT to help you assess and convert documents into these formats if you need to with this prompt:
I want to use this document inside a Custom GPT as part of its Knowledge section. Please assess the content and do the following:
Identify if this content is suitable to be uploaded directly (e.g. clear, clean, complete), or if it needs to be rewritten, summarised, or broken into smaller chunks.
If the formatting is poor (e.g. tables, layout issues, scanned PDF style), convert it into clean, text-based markdown or plain text format that preserves all meaning and structure.
Remove any unnecessary elements such as headers/footers, page numbers, duplicated content, or visual formatting that won’t translate well into plain text.
Structure the output into a clean, well-labelled text file that can be uploaded into the Knowledge section of a Custom GPT (i.e. .txt or .md format). Use clear section titles and bullet points where appropriate.
Keep all the important content, but make sure it’s optimised for retrieval by a GPT model. That means using simple, clear language and logical structure.
Name the output file appropriately (e.g. “2025_PricingOverview.txt” or “Legal_Terms_Guide.md”).
Please begin by assessing the suitability of the input and then output a clean, upload-ready version.
[Optional Tip (if you’re uploading a file):
Start with:]
“Please assess the uploaded file using the instructions below…” and paste the prompt afterward.
Step 4: Check the File List
You’ll see a list of your uploaded files. Use the trash icon to remove any if needed. You can update this list at any time.
Step 5: Save and Publish
Click “Save” or “Publish” to apply your changes. Your GPT can now access your uploaded documents to answer relevant prompts.
What Kind of Files Work Best?
Ideal Files:
- Cleanly written PDFs (guides, SOPs, FAQs)
- Contracts and legal templates
- Onboarding documents, pricing sheets
- Internal wikis (exported to .txt or .md)
Avoid These:
- Scanned documents with images
- Slides with only images or no speaker notes
- Encrypted or locked PDFs
- Files full of links without explanations
Tip: For web pages, copy-paste the content into a clean .txt or .md file.
How the GPT Uses This Info
Your GPT will search the uploaded documents in real time when a relevant prompt is given. It doesn’t memorise the content — it retrieves from it. It performs best when the material is clearly written and structured.
Watch Outs
- No File Structuring = Confused GPT
If you upload a single giant PDF with 50 topics and poor formatting, the GPT will struggle. Break it into smaller, well-labelled files. - Bad Formatting = Bad Responses
If your file has unusual fonts, broken tables, or visual layouts (especially common in PDFs), the GPT may misread it. Clean formats like .txt, .docx, or markdown work best. - No Source Citations
By default, GPT won’t say where the information came from. If this matters, add an instruction like: “Always mention which document you’re referencing.” - File Limit
You can only upload 20 files per GPT. Curate carefully and consider trimming or combining related documents.
Curating the “Core Knowledge” for Best Results
Ask yourself:
- What do I want this GPT to do? Only upload documents relevant to those tasks.
- Will someone else use this? Include glossaries or context if needed.
- Is this content clear and self-contained? If not, simplify or split into manageable chunks.
Example Use Cases:
LegalGPT: Upload contracts, clause trackers, fallback templates
SalesGPT: Upload pitch decks, product specs, objection-handling guides
HRGPT: Upload company policies, onboarding FAQs
Bonus Tip: Pair With System Instructions
After uploading, adjust your GPT’s instructions to reflect how it should use that knowledge. Example: “You are a helpful assistant trained specifically on SQREEM’s legal contracts and internal SOPs. Always answer using information from the uploaded documents. If unsure, say ‘I’m not certain — please check with legal.’” You can also use the “Prompt Starter” section to load reusable queries.
Updating Your Knowledge Files Later
Return to “Edit GPT > Knowledge” anytime to remove outdated files or upload new ones. Save to apply changes. Your GPT will instantly use the latest content.
Version Control and Multiple GPTs
You can create multiple GPTs with different document sets, or use file naming conventions to stay organised. Examples:
01_PricingOverview_Q1-2025.txt
02_TOS_Updated_April2025.docx
03_FAQ_InternalOnly.md
What To Do Next
Now that your GPT has your content, test it by asking:
“Summarise our latest pricing model”
“What’s our refund policy?”
“Write a client email using our onboarding flow”
“Check clause 7.3 in the uploaded SOW template”
You May Also Find Useful:
Author
Discover more from AIinASIA
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Learning
How to Use the “Create an Action” Feature in Custom GPTs
This guide walks through the Create an Action feature in OpenAI’s GPT builder — enabling your GPT to call live APIs for real-time data or actions. Written for Asia’s business and tech professionals, it shows how to connect internal tools to GPTs in just a few clear steps.
Published
2 weeks agoon
May 20, 2025By
AIinAsia
Turn your GPT into a powerful API-aware assistant that can fetch data, trigger services, or complete tasks — all from inside the chat.
TL;DR — What You Need To Know
- “Actions” let your custom GPT interact with external APIs — think booking systems, CRMs, weather lookups or internal databases
- You define the API, describe it with an OpenAPI schema, and explain when and how the GPT should use it
- Ideal for businesses that want to automate workflows inside ChatGPT — without needing full app builds
- Common use cases across Asia include: order lookups, stock checks, HR systems, and appointment scheduling
- This guide walks you through building, testing, and deploying your first Action step by step
What Is a GPT Action?
Actions allow your GPT to call an external API endpoint during a conversation. For example:
“Can you check the current air quality in Jakarta?”
→ GPT sends a request to an API you defined
→ Returns real-time AQI data into the chat
This means your GPT isn’t just a static assistant — it becomes a live, interactive tool that can “do” things.
Step 1: Set Up Your Custom GPT
Start as usual:
- Go to: https://chat.openai.com/gpts
- Click “Create”
- Fill out your GPT’s name, instructions, and tone as needed
- Switch to the Configure tab
Step 2: Prepare Your API
You’ll need an existing web API to connect. This could be:
- A public API (like OpenWeather, Google Calendar, etc.)
- A private internal API (e.g., inventory, HR systems, internal bots)
- A no-code tool like Zapier or Make, which exposes endpoints
Make sure:
- It supports HTTPS
- It accepts and returns JSON
- You have the API key (if it requires auth)
Example Use Case:
Check a user’s leave balance via an HR API.
Step 3: Write Your OpenAPI Schema
This is how GPT knows what your API does. You describe it using the OpenAPI 3.0 format — a structured YAML or JSON file.
Here’s a simple example for a GET request to check leave days:
yamlCopyEditopenapi: 3.0.0
info:
title: HR API
version: 1.0.0
paths:
/leave-balance:
get:
summary: Check user's leave balance
parameters:
- in: query
name: employee_id
schema:
type: string
required: true
description: ID of the employee
responses:
'200':
description: Leave balance returned
content:
application/json:
schema:
type: object
properties:
remaining_days:
type: integer
Paste this into an .yaml
file or host it on a public URL (e.g., via GitHub Gist or a secure S3 bucket).
Step 4: Add the Action in GPT Builder
Back in the Configure tab:
- Scroll to “Actions”
- Click “Add Action”
- Paste your API’s base URL
- Paste or link to your OpenAPI schema
- Add a description for GPT — e.g., “Use this action to check leave balances when users ask about time off”
- Set authentication:
- No auth
- API key (via headers or query param)
- OAuth (advanced)
Once added, test the schema using GPT’s built-in validator.
Step 5: Write GPT Instructions to Use the Action
Update your GPT’s Instructions to explicitly describe when to use the action.
Example:
When a user asks about leave days, use the HR API to check their balance. Ask for their employee ID first. Do not guess.
This ensures GPT won’t try to call the API unless it’s appropriate.
Step 6: Test the Action
Switch to Preview GPT and type:
“How many leave days do I have left?”
→ GPT should ask for your employee ID
→ Then call the action
→ Then return the result, e.g. “You have 12 leave days remaining.”
Watch for:
- Correct input formatting
- Unexpected errors or failed calls
- GPT failing to use the action when it should
Fix instructions or the schema if anything breaks.
Step 7: Publish and Maintain
Once you’re confident:
- Hit Publish
- Choose Private, Link or Public visibility
- Keep your API uptime in mind — if the endpoint is down, GPT won’t function properly
- Monitor logs and rate limits if it’s a high-traffic GPT
Real-World Examples from Asia
- Singapore travel agencies integrating visa APIs for instant eligibility checks
- Malaysian e-commerce startups checking stock or delivery status via GPT
- Indonesian HR tech firms adding internal policy lookups via GPTs
- Thai insurance brokers offering premium calculators through live API calls
The best part? You can connect more than one action — allowing your GPT to call several services like a digital command centre.
Security Note
Always hide API keys and use headers or environment variables for private services. GPTs do not store user data, but you are responsible for how your API handles it.
Avoid exposing endpoints with write access (like deleting records or submitting payments) unless fully secured and monitored.
Final Thoughts: ChatGPT as Your API Concierge
With Actions, GPTs are no longer just helpful assistants — they’re functional bridges into your real systems. In Asia, where lean automation is everything, this may be the most powerful GPT feature yet.
Whether you’re triggering a report, checking a shipment, or logging a support ticket — if there’s an API for it, GPT can now do it.
So the question becomes: what internal service would you automate first?
You May Also Like:
- Build Your Own Agentic AI — No Coding Required
- Or tap here to try this now at ChatGPT.
Author
Discover more from AIinASIA
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

The Dirty Secret Behind Your Favourite AI Tools

How To Teach ChatGPT Your Writing Style

Upgrade Your ChatGPT Game With These 5 Prompts Tips
Trending
-
Life3 weeks ago
7 Mind-Blowing New ChatGPT Use Cases in 2025
-
Learning2 weeks ago
How to Use the “Create an Action” Feature in Custom GPTs
-
Business3 weeks ago
AI Just Killed 8 Jobs… But Created 15 New Ones Paying £100k+
-
Learning2 weeks ago
How to Upload Knowledge into Your Custom GPT
-
Learning2 weeks ago
Build Your Own Custom GPT in Under 30 Minutes – Step-by-Step Beginner’s Guide
-
Life2 days ago
How To Teach ChatGPT Your Writing Style
-
Business2 weeks ago
Adrian’s Arena: Stop Collecting AI Tools and Start Building a Stack
-
Life3 weeks ago
Adrian’s Arena: Will AI Get You Fired? 9 Mistakes That Could Cost You Everything