AI in the Classroom - Daily

Was This AI Tool Built for Learning or Just for Work?

8 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Was This AI Tool Built for Learning or Just for Work?

Descripción

In this episode we explore the question: were the AI tools entering classrooms actually designed for learning? We look at a May 2026 preprint from Hassan Khosravi, Ryan Baker, and colleagues that argues many AI tools now being used in schools were originally built for work, not education. Topics covered: * How does the tool handle cognitive effort? * What does the tool do when students make errors? * What does the tool measure as success? * Does the tool remember anything meaningful about the learner over time? * Why tools that look effective during practice may fail when students must work without them * What Khanmigo’s redesign can teach us about building AI around actual learner needs * Why procurement conversations should focus less on marketing claims and more on learning design Source: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2605.04816

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64 episodios

Portada del episodio Was This AI Tool Built for Learning or Just for Work?

Was This AI Tool Built for Learning or Just for Work?

In this episode we explore the question: were the AI tools entering classrooms actually designed for learning? We look at a May 2026 preprint from Hassan Khosravi, Ryan Baker, and colleagues that argues many AI tools now being used in schools were originally built for work, not education. Topics covered: * How does the tool handle cognitive effort? * What does the tool do when students make errors? * What does the tool measure as success? * Does the tool remember anything meaningful about the learner over time? * Why tools that look effective during practice may fail when students must work without them * What Khanmigo’s redesign can teach us about building AI around actual learner needs * Why procurement conversations should focus less on marketing claims and more on learning design Source: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2605.04816

Ayer8 min
Portada del episodio Are Students Cheating With AI, or Are Assignments Unclear?

Are Students Cheating With AI, or Are Assignments Unclear?

In this episode we explore why student perceptions of AI cheating are far less settled than many school policies assume. We look at new survey data from Oxford University Press showing that students draw very different lines around AI use, from seeing any AI support as off-limits to not viewing full AI completion of homework as cheating.  Topics covered: * Why students disagree about what counts as AI cheating * The connection between AI use, assignment purpose, and “fidelity” * Why AI detection tools are unreliable for high-stakes decisions * How teachers can clarify when independent thinking is the goal * What instructional coaches should look for when reviewing assignments * Why district AI policies need to explain the instructional “why,” not just the rule * How schools can shift from catching misuse to designing clearer learning conditions Sources: https://fdslive.oup.com/www.oup.com/oxed/research-reports/Navigating_AI_in_Education_Research_Report_June2026.pdf?region=uk https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0360131526000540

16 de jun de 20267 min
Portada del episodio The Hidden Work That Makes EdTech Work

The Hidden Work That Makes EdTech Work

In this episode we explore the hidden human work that makes educational technology actually work. We look at a working paper on Khan Academy use in government boarding schools in Uttar Pradesh, India, where schools with dedicated “lab-in-charges” saw much stronger student learning gains than schools that had access to the same technology without that support. Topics covered: * What the Khan Academy “lab-in-charge” study found * Why the same technology produced very different outcomes across schools * The organizational and relational work behind successful EdTech use * Lessons from a 2012 personalized reading platform study at Achievement First * What the Khanmigo adoption story reveals about student engagement * How sophisticated AI can make old implementation gaps harder to see Sources: https://www.nber.org/papers/w34683 https://carlhendrick.substack.com/p/the-monthly-dispatch-whats-new-in-a9a

15 de jun de 20267 min
Portada del episodio When AI Reads First

When AI Reads First

In this episode we explore why sequencing matters when AI enters reading instruction. Drawing on Student Achievement Partners’ argument to “keep text at the center,” we look at a practical question for teachers and district leaders: does AI arrive before students have wrestled with a complex text, or after they have made their own first attempt? Topics covered: * Why “keeping text at the center” depends on instructional sequence * The difference between AI as a reading scaffold and AI as a reading substitute * How pre-reading summaries can short-circuit student comprehension work * What productive failure has to do with complex text instruction * Why “access support” and “pre-reading substitution” are not the same thing * The risk of designing away the productive friction that reading requires Source: https://learnwithsap.org/literacy/keep-text-at-the-center-of-a-changing-world/

11 de jun de 20267 min