Close Menu
TechUpdateAlert

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Sword of the Sea review

    August 18, 2025

    Honor Magic V5 is coming to the UK on August 28

    August 18, 2025

    Samsung’s budget Galaxy Buds 3 FE are here

    August 18, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Sword of the Sea review
    • Honor Magic V5 is coming to the UK on August 28
    • Samsung’s budget Galaxy Buds 3 FE are here
    • Towa and the Guardians of the Sacred Tree might make me ditch Hades
    • Upgrading to Windows 11 on an old PC could be easier than you think
    • Chris Hansen investigates Roblox over child exploitation allegations
    • Teachers Are Trying to Make AI Work for Them
    • Save $250 on this RTX 5060 gaming laptop with Copilot+ AI features
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    TechUpdateAlertTechUpdateAlert
    • Home
    • Gaming
    • Laptops
    • Mobile
    • Software
    • Reviews
    • AI & Tech
    • Gadgets
    • How-To
    TechUpdateAlert
    Home»Software»Teachers Are Trying to Make AI Work for Them
    Software

    Teachers Are Trying to Make AI Work for Them

    techupdateadminBy techupdateadminAugust 18, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Teachers Are Trying to Make AI Work for Them
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Jennifer Goodnow, who teaches English as a second language in New York, feels similarly. She now plugs complex readings, like essays or book excerpts, into ChatGPT and asks it to create separate versions for advanced and beginner students, with corresponding depth-of-knowledge questions.

    Amanda Bickerstaff, a former teacher and CEO of AI for Education, an organization that offers training and resources to help educators integrate AI into their classrooms, puts it bluntly: “Teachers are incorporating AI because they’ve always needed better planning tools. Now they finally have them.”

    The same goes for students with individualized education plans, commonly called IEPs—especially those with reading or processing disabilities. If a student struggles with comprehending text, for instance, a teacher might use generative AI to simplify sentence structures, highlight key vocabulary, or break down dense passages into more digestible chunks. Some tools can even reformat materials to include visuals or audio, helping students access the same content in a different way.

    Chamberlain, Johnson, and Goodnow all teach language arts, subjects where AI can offer benefits—and setbacks—in the classroom. Math teachers, though, tend to be more skeptical.

    “Large language models are really bad at computation,” Bickerstaff says. Her team explicitly advises against using tools like ChatGPT to teach math. Instead, some teachers use AI for adjacent tasks—generating slides, reinforcing math vocabulary, or walking students through steps without solving problems outright.

    But there’s something else teachers can use AI for: staying ahead of AI. Nearly three years after ChatGPT became available to the public, teachers can no longer ignore that their kids use it. Johnson recalls one student who was asked to analyze the song “America” from West Side Story only to turn in a thesis on Simon & Garfunkel’s song of same name. “I was like, ‘Dude, did you even read the response?’” he says.

    Rather than ban the tools, many teachers are designing around them. Johnson has students draft essays step-by-step in a Google Doc with version history enabled, which allows him to track students’ writing progress as it appears on the page. Chamberlain requires students to submit their planning documents alongside final work. Goodnow is toying with the idea of having students plug AI-generated essays into assignments and then critique the results.

    “Three years ago, I would’ve thrown the book at them,” Chamberlain says. “Now it’s more like, ‘Show me your process. Where were you an agent in this?’”

    Even so, detecting AI use remains a game of vibes. Plagiarism checkers are notoriously unreliable. Districts have been reluctant to draw hard lines, in part because the tools are moving faster than the rules. But if there’s one thing almost everyone agrees on, it’s this: Students need AI literacy, and they’re not getting it.

    “We need to create courses for high school students on AI use, and I don’t know that anybody knows the answer to this,” Goodnow says. “Some sort of ongoing dialog between students and teachers on how to ethically, question mark, use these tools.”

    Organizations like AI for Education aim to provide that literacy. Founded in 2023, it works with school districts across the US to create AI guidance and training. But even in the most proactive schools, the focus is still on tool use—not critical understanding. Students know how to generate answers. They don’t know how to tell whether those answers are inaccurate, biased, or made up. Johnson has begun building lessons around AI hallucinations—like asking ChatGPT how many R’s are in the word “strawberry.” (Spoiler: It often gets it wrong.) “They need to see that you can’t always trust it,” he says.

    As the tools improve, they’re also reaching younger students, raising new concerns about how kids interact with LLMs. Bickerstaff warns that younger children, still learning to distinguish fact from fiction, may be especially vulnerable to over-trusting generative tools. That trust, she says, could have real consequences for their development and sense of reality. Already, some students are using AI not just to complete tasks but to think through them—blurring the line between tool and tutor.

    Across the board, educators say this fall feels like a turning point. Districts are rolling out new products, students are getting savvier, and teachers are racing to set the norms before the tech sets them itself.

    “If we know we’re preparing students for the future workforce—and we’re hearing from leaders across many different companies that AI is going to be super important—then we need to start now,” Bickerstaff says.

    That’s what teachers like Johnson and Goodnow are doing, one prompt, one student, one weird apocalypse scenario at a time.

    Teachers work
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleSave $250 on this RTX 5060 gaming laptop with Copilot+ AI features
    Next Article Chris Hansen investigates Roblox over child exploitation allegations
    techupdateadmin
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Software

    The Amazon Fire HD 8 tablet plummets to its lowest price this year

    August 18, 2025
    Software

    These Are the Biggest Mistakes Home Cooks Make, According to Professional Chefs

    August 18, 2025
    Software

    Microsoft is finally improving Windows 11’s dark mode

    August 18, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Apple Pencil With ‘Trackball’ Tip, Ability to Draw on Any Surface Described in Patent Document

    July 9, 20253 Views

    Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Galaxy Z Flip 7: First Impressions

    July 9, 20253 Views

    The Bezos-funded climate satellite is lost in space

    July 9, 20252 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Most Popular

    Best Fitbit fitness trackers and watches in 2025

    July 9, 20250 Views

    There are still 200+ Prime Day 2025 deals you can get

    July 9, 20250 Views

    The best earbuds we’ve tested for 2025

    July 9, 20250 Views
    Our Picks

    Sword of the Sea review

    August 18, 2025

    Honor Magic V5 is coming to the UK on August 28

    August 18, 2025

    Samsung’s budget Galaxy Buds 3 FE are here

    August 18, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • Terms and Conditions
    © 2025 techupdatealert. Designed by Pro.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.