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Dylan Kane's avatar

I think all of that AI for teachers startup energy is heading the wrong direction. I'm sure that generative AI is already able to generate some clever lesson ideas, work samples, etc. That's all fine, but what I'm sure generative AI can't do right now and will struggle with for a long time is coherence. It's really hard to design a curriculum that builds on itself, sets up future lessons, revisits and expands on past representations, teachers high-leverage routines and then makes effective use of them, etc. Any generative AI that is mostly trying to help teachers plan lessons will just result in more patchwork quality. We should have higher standards for curricular coherence than that.

The direction I'd rather AI startups go in is to focus on all of the non-planning tasks that fill teachers' days. Here are some tasks I've done in the last week that I wish AI could have done for me:

Post next week's assignments to Google Classroom

Pull homework completion from DeltaMath to Google Classroom, and then from Google Classroom to SchoolRunner

Write course descriptions for my classes

Pull and organize a list of missing assignments from the last few weeks

Download my students' NWEA data and clean up the spreadsheet so it's easy for me to work with

Find ISBN numbers for a bunch of math books I'm ordering on a grant we got

Write up an agenda for our 7th/8th grade team meetings and email out a calendar invite with the agenda attached

I understand that these are inherently more challenging. They involve multiple platforms and aren't very word-focused so they don't play to generative AI's strengths. But I think this points to a bigger problem. Lots of people want to solve the sexy-sounding challenge of "help teachers plan lessons" even if they don't do a very good job, and no one wants to solve the less-sexy "free teachers from some time-consuming administrative tasks."

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Patricia Edelmann's avatar

Thinking AI will solve the education issues out there is similar to the notion of a silver bullet curriculum that will equal the playing field for all learners. Teaching and learning is inherently social, sure having great content is a huge help. Borrowing a phrase heard at a panel discussion, I wish I could remember who said it.... " the curriculum is the science and the educator is the art".

Speaking as an Elementary educator, the development of learners, feeding and flaming curiosity and providing a safe environment where children are able to explore and learn to work together is a huge part of the work, perhaps the most important. As for the content and lesson plans, no matter how well written, it is the delivery and the understanding of how children, teens and even adults learn best that allows that content to resonate and create meaning. Teaching is an art and yes, there are many a routine and inefficient task that can be helped with AI, but what about the art and humanity of the profession. Is AI addressing the craft of teaching as well?

The points you make, Dan, about the most common teacher complaints and political solutions needed to reverse the teacher attrition and attract more people to the profession speak directly to the "artist" behind every effective educator. In actuality, it stings and potentially aggravates the challenges facing the profession with claims that AI can "fix teaching." What we really need is AI to write a monologue touting the impossible paradoxes of life as an educator and have America Ferrera deliver it on the big screen during a major motion picture....a la Barbie!

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