Episode 21- Why Banning AI Hurts the Students Who Need It Most With Dr. Nicole Danishevsky, Southern Connecticut State University
Dr. Nicole Danishevsky spent 27 years teaching middle school math and leading district-level curriculum work before stepping into higher education this year. Now an assistant professor at Southern Connecticut State University, she's preparing the next generation of teachers to walk into classrooms where AI is already part of the landscape.
In this conversation with Bob Hutchins, Phd and Dr. Jessica White, Nicole talks about what she's seeing on both sides of the desk. As a parent of a high schooler and a college student, she's watched the early "sign this paper saying you didn't use AI" moment evolve into something more thoughtful. As a former district leader, she's lived through the messy work of getting policy, training, and culture to move at roughly the same speed.
The discussion gets into something we keep coming back to on this show: ban culture creates mistrust and pushes students underground. It also widens equity gaps. The six hours a student spends in school may be the only time they have access to thoughtful guidance on how to use these tools well. Take that away, and you've handed the advantage to kids whose parents already pay for tutors.
Nicole brings a math educator's lens to the question of AI as confidence builder, especially for girls in STEM. She makes the case for using AI to break concepts down, offer real-world entry points, and act as a kind of always-available study partner. Not a replacement for teachers. An extension.
We also talk about onboarding new teachers, vertical scaffolding from kindergarten through high school, and what a truly AI-ready school system looks like from a leadership perspective.