Even as their personal use of AI has increased, educators have mixed feelings about drawing on the technology in their classrooms. AI chatbots can drastically ease teachers’ workloads in some areas, ...
Recent research has shown that generative AI is already a mainstay for a majority of American students and teachers. One report found that 84 percent of high school students use generative AI tools ...
When Emily Sanders worked as a high school English teacher, she never imagined being tasked with teaching her colleagues how to incorporate artificial intelligence into lesson plans. “I learned how to ...
More preschool teachers are using generative AI in the classroom and believe technology can help with virtual field trips and ...
You can lead teachers to a technology tool, but can you make them use it? Nudging teachers into the habit of exploring their students’ data may help teachers and students get more out of learning ...
To support improved student outcomes, educators increasingly look to technology. But how do they fuel authentic engagement, using technology as a tool to not only enhance learning but also inspire ...
Technology in the classroom has transformed how students learn and how teachers teach. What once was a space filled with lectures, textbooks, and rigid routines has evolved into a dynamic, interactive ...
Talk to a teacher lately, and you’ll probably get an earful about AI’s effects on student attention spans, reading comprehension, and cheating. As AI becomes ubiquitous in everyday life — thanks to ...
School districts are spending thousands of dollars on these tools, despite research showing the technology is far from ...
Some learners and teachers expressed optimism on the assistive benefits of the artificial intelligence (AI) within the ...
Barbara Brown receives funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council. Sue Mylde does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that ...
What do you want to be when you grow up?” I asked my fourth graders as we circled up for our morning meeting. Hands shot up: ...