The AI Shift in Education: Why Waiting Is the Biggest Risk with Dr. Stacie Chana
Dr. Stacie Chana explains that artificial intelligence must be treated as an urgent equity issue because, if schools do not intentionally teach AI skills, students without access will be left behind in a rapidly changing job market. She emphasizes that AI is accelerating faster than any previous technological shift and will transform society within the next decade, making it essential for schools to prepare students now.
She states that school leaders must ensure all students understand both the conceptual foundations of AI and how to actively experiment with it, so they can succeed in future careers. She stresses that access to AI learning opportunities is critical and should not be limited to certain groups of students.
Dr. Chana advises leaders to begin implementation by forming diverse teams that include multiple perspectives, including skeptics, to guide decision-making. She highlights the importance of reviewing existing policies, especially around privacy and student data protection, before introducing AI tools, and ensuring no personal identifying information is shared with AI systems.
She explains that schools must establish clear guardrails and expectations for AI use through open dialogue with staff, students, and families. She emphasizes ongoing conversations around ethics, safety, privacy, and bias as foundational to responsible implementation.
Dr. Chana recommends starting AI use with adults first, integrating it into professional learning so educators become comfortable and proficient before introducing it to students. She stresses that AI should not be taught as a standalone subject but embedded into existing curriculum and real-world problem-solving tasks.
She highlights that early student exposure should focus on simple, low-risk applications, such as brainstorming, while more advanced learners can engage in tasks like coding or data visualization. She underscores that instruction should be developmentally appropriate, with younger students focusing on conceptual understanding and older students engaging directly with tools.
Dr. Chana emphasizes the need to build a culture of experimentation where both educators and students feel safe to explore AI within established boundaries. She notes that AI cannot be avoided and compares its inevitability to electricity, stressing that schools must move with urgency even while maintaining thoughtful implementation.
She advises that students should be trained on widely used foundational AI models because those are the tools they will encounter in the workforce, rather than relying solely on niche educational tools.
She explains that AI can significantly enhance instructional leadership by supporting tasks such as strategic planning, rubric creation, data analysis, and communication, allowing leaders to work more efficiently while still applying professional judgment.
Dr. Chana warns that critical conversations about bias, ethics, privacy, and safety are often missing in schools, despite being essential. She explains that AI systems can reinforce societal biases because they are trained on existing internet data, and educators must help students critically evaluate outputs.
She raises concerns about emerging risks, including deepfakes, misinformation, cyberbullying, and the impact of AI on student identity and mental health, emphasizing the need for awareness and media literacy.
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