I’ve been writing about AI literacy for a while now, and one thing keeps bothering me about how the conversation unfolds in ...
Most classrooms that use AI in 2026 are teaching students how to use it. Fewer are teaching students how to question it.
I’ve spent the past few months pulling together something I wish I’d had years ago when I first started experimenting with AI ...
I’ve been tracking AI tools on Educators Technology since 2011, and nothing I’ve covered in that time has moved as fast as what’s happening with agentic AI right now. A few months ago, most teachers ...
One of the questions I get asked most often is: “Where should I start learning about AI?” And honestly, the answer has changed a lot over the past year. The big tech companies have rolled out their ...
If you teach English learners, you already know the daily puzzle: a classroom full of students at five or six different ...
Art and music classrooms are built on something AI will never fully replicate: the deeply personal act of creating something from nothing. A student mixing paint on a palette, a teenager finding their ...
History and social studies classrooms run on stories, primary sources, and the ability to think critically about both. AI tools are starting to change how teachers bring all three into their lessons, ...
English Language Arts occupies a complicated place when it comes to AI. The subject is built on reading, writing, and discussion, and AI happens to be very good at processing language and generating ...
Science is a subject built on doing. Students learn chemistry through titrations, biology through dissections, physics through motion experiments, and earth science through field observations. That ...