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The future of education is AI-powered — and that’s a good thing

A few weeks ago, I asked you how you feel about AI in the classroom.

52% of you are concerned about it, and 24% of you said that “AI is the downfall of civilization”.

Yikes — that really bums me out.

The reality is that AI isn’t going anywhere, and will soon touch every corner of our lives.

The way I see it, you have two options:

  1. Bury your head in the sand

  2. Learn everything you can

I’ll let you guess which one I recommend. 🤷

Last year, the US Office of Educational Technology published a 70-page report on AI in the classroom.

There’s a ton of great info in there, and it’s a good place to start. Here are the key takeaways:

🤖 The new classroom buddy

Imagine a world where your child’s education is as unique as their fingerprint. 

We’re not far from it. 

AI adapts to your kid’s learning pace, style, and interests, making education a custom-tailored experience.

It can spot when they’re struggling and offer extra help, or provide advanced materials when they’re breezing through lessons. It’s like having a tutor who’s always on call. 

AI in education isn’t about robots replacing teachers. It’s more like having a super-smart assistant who’s always ready to help. 

And this stuff is already out in the wild.

The other day, I was researching some new business strategies on Quora, and a helpful AI buddy provided me with the exact information I was looking for, and predicted some great follow-up questions.

Source: Quora

🚗 Parents — you’re still in control

Remember, AI might be the co-pilot, but you’re still driving the car. You’ve gotta stay involved in your child’s education. 

Ask about the AI tools they're using and understand how they work. 

  • Are they keeping data safe? 

  • Are they treating every student fairly? 

  • Are they staying up to date?

Keep asking, keep learning.

With great technology comes great responsibility. Data privacy is a big deal. You don’t want your kid’s learning data ending up in the wrong hands. 

As we zoom into the future, two things need to be in every parent’s toolkit: trust and involvement. 

👉 Trust in the technology your kids are using. Is it reliable? Is it doing what it’s supposed to?

👉 And involvement — be a part of the conversation. Whether it's with teachers, tech developers, or other parents, your voice matters.

The seven recommendations

The report concludes with seven recommendations:

1. Emphasize Humans-in-the-Loop. We reject the notion of AI as replacing teachers. Teachers and other people must be “in the loop” whenever AI is applied in order to notice patterns and automate educational processes. We call upon all constituents to adopt Humans-in-the-Loop as a key criteria.

2. Align AI Models to a Shared Vision for Education. We call upon educational decision makers, researchers, and evaluators to determine the quality of an educational technology based not only on outcomes, but also based on the degree to which the models at the heart of the AI tools and systems align to a shared vision for teaching and learning. 

3. Design AI Using Modern Learning Principles. Further, achieving effective systems requires more than processing “big data”— it requires more than data science. Applications of AI must be based on established, modern learning principles, the wisdom of educational practitioners, and should leverage the expertise in the educational assessment community around detecting bias and improving fairness.

4. Prioritize Strengthening Trust. Technology can help us to achieve our educational objectives only when we trust it. And our listening sessions revealed the ways in which distrust of artificial intelligence is natural. Because trust develops as people meet and relate to each other, we call for a focus on building trust and establishing criteria for trustworthiness of emerging educational technologies within the associations, convenings, and professional organizations that bring educators, innovators, researchers, and policymakers together.

5. Inform and Involve Educators. Going beyond receiving notice and explanation of the use of AI, educational leaders must prioritize informing and involving educational constituents so they are prepared to investigate how and when AI fits specific teaching and learning needs, and what risks may rise. Addressing data privacy is important, but strengthening trust requires more than data privacy: educators need AI systems that can be inspected, explained, and guide how humans can override recommendations generated using AI. The Office of Educational Technology can play a leading role in providing information and stimulating involvement, in concert with activities organized at all levels of the educational system.

6. Focus R&D on Addressing Context and Enhancing Trust and Safety. Research that focuses on how AI-enabled systems can adapt to context (diversity among learners, variability in instructional approaches, differences in educational settings) is essential to answering the question “Do specific applications of AI work in education, and if so, for whom and under what conditions?” We call upon researchers and their funders to prioritize investigations of how AI can address the long tail of learning variability and to seek advances in how AI can incorporate contextual considerations when detecting patterns and recommending options to students and teachers. Further, researchers should accelerate their attention to how to enhance trust and safety in AI-enabled systems for education.

7. Develop Education-specific Guidelines and Guardrails. Data privacy regulation already covers educational technology; further, data security is already a priority of school educational technology leaders. Modifications and enhancements to the status quo will be required to address the new capabilities alongside the risks of AI. We call for involvement of all perspectives in the ecosystem to define a set of guidelines (such as voluntary disclosures and technology procurement checklists) and guardrails (such as enhancements to existing regulations or additional requirements) so that we can achieve safe and effective AI for education

Embrace the Change

AI in education is exciting, a bit scary, and full of potential. 

As parents, l encourage you to embrace this change. 

👉 Be proactive.

👉 Be informed.

👉 Be involved. 

By doing so, you’re not just preparing your kids for the future — you’re taking an active part in shaping it. 🚀