AI literacy for researchers means using, questioning, verifying, and documenting AI across the research lifecycle.
AI-giarism, coined by Chan (2023), names the moment AI use crosses into academic misconduct. What the research found, and ...
The conversation around AI in education has moved. A year ago, most teachers were still debating if AI belonged in schools at all. Now, with 61% of K-12 teachers using AI-driven tools in their ...
History does not have to be dry facts and events. AI chatbots can turn units into conversations students want to have. History opens up when students can interview the past. A chatbot lets them ...
If you are to ask me about the instructional aspect that AI has significantly revolutionized, I would say lesson planning. I spent almost 15 years in classroom teaching, and although I quit teaching ...
When students sit down to research a topic, the process usually involves bouncing between Google, Wikipedia, a database like JSTOR, and whatever AI chatbot they have open on a second tab. Perplexity ...
If you teach English learners, you already know the daily puzzle: a classroom full of students at five or six different proficiency levels, all needing different kinds of support at the same time. You ...
Inquiry-based learning has been gaining more attention in classrooms across the world. Teachers often ask, What does it look like in practice? How does it differ from more traditional approaches? At ...
ChatGPT’s new image generator is truly a game changer. I’ve been experimenting with it over the past few days, and I have to say, I’m thoroughly impressed. From where I stand, we’re right at the edge ...
In its recommendations on AI ethics, the U.S. Department of Education pointed to a February 2024 proposal from NIST researchers to build on the “long-standing concepts” set out in the 1979 Belmont ...
Lesson planning is one of those areas where you can truly make the best of AI. As someone who’s spent hours crafting detailed plans, adapting materials, and trying to meet every student’s need I know ...
If machines can write essays, what’s the point of assigning them? That question, raised by Hua Hsu in his New Yorker essay What Happens After A.I. Destroys College Writing?, lingers like a quiet ...