Facebook Posts
I'm not sure how many more of these pieces about AI influences on education I'm going to post, because at this point, I think the conclusion is both clear and obscure.
Clear: Our current high school curricula and college liberal arts degrees cannot continue to be administered as they've been for the last century.
Obscure: What we'll replace them with.
**
If at first teachers worried about students using chatbots to write essays, now new agentic tools such as Claude Code are allowing students to outsource even more of their work to the machines. Need to take an online math quiz? Write a biology-lab report? Create a PowerPoint presentation for history class? AI can do all of this and more. One high schooler recently told me that he struggles to think of a single assignment that AI wouldn’t be able to do for him.
As a measure of just how good AI has become at schoolwork, consider a new bot called Einstein. Several weeks ago, the tool went viral with big claims: “Einstein checks for new assignments and knocks them out before the deadline,” a website advertising the bot explained. All that a student had to do was hand over their credentials for Canvas, the popular learning-management platform, and Einstein promised to do the rest...
When I first came across Einstein, I was skeptical: Flashy AI demos have a way of overpromising and under-delivering. So I decided to test the tool out for myself. Because I’m not a college student, I enrolled in a free online introductory-statistics class. The course website explained that the class was self-paced and that it could help undergraduates, postgraduates, medical students, and even lecturers build up basic statistical knowledge. I set the bot loose, and in less than an hour, Einstein had worked through all eight modules and seven quizzes. There were some hiccups—the bot took one quiz 15 times—but it ultimately earned a perfect score in the class. As for me? I hardly so much as read the course website.
...Einstein does seem to be an indicator of where AI in the classroom is headed. The latest bots have massive context windows, meaning that students can feed in mountains of course content such as syllabi, lecture slides, and practice exams. Today’s agentic tools can complete all kinds of tasks, such as participating in online discussion forums and taking notes on recorded lectures without student intervention. According to one analysis, the percentage of students middle-school age or older who self-reported using AI for help with homework climbed by 14 points from May to December of last year...
Instructors, as I have previously written, are also using plenty of AI. Canvas recently introduced a new AI teaching agent designed to save instructors time on “low educational value tasks” such as organizing online-course modules and adjusting assignment due dates. “Faculty are using AI tools both for instructional purposes, for building course materials, but they’re also starting to play around with generative AI to actually grade and assess the learning,” Marc Watkins, a researcher at the University of Mississippi who studies AI and education, told me. He gave a hypothetical: “I could set my agent up, open it up in my course, go out on campus to walk across campus to get a cup of coffee at Starbucks,” he said. By the time he returned, 15 minutes later, all of the essays would be graded, and “bespoke personal feedback” would be sent out to each student. AI can save teachers time—that same grading takes him 10 or 12 hours, Watkins estimated—but in the process, the technology threatens the relationship between students and teachers that is core to education. “That’s really scary,” he said.
Most people I spoke with seemed unhappy with the current trajectory of bots in the classroom. Even as growing numbers of students are using the technology, a majority believe that the more they use AI for classwork, the more it will harm their critical-thinking skills...Some educators are worried about “a fully automated loop”—as the Modern Language Association put it last fall—in which AI-generated assignments are completed and graded by AI agents. Instructors have taken to analyzing students’ Google Docs history to make sure they are typing responses live instead of pasting in text from a bot. But of course, an AI work-around exists for that too: A new suite of human-typing simulators promises to generate text to make it look as if a student is writing in real time when, really, the work is being done by AI.
... See MoreSee Less
20 hours ago
- Likes: 51
- Shares: 43
- Comments: 23
Why is all the talk and worry about students and not including the role of teachers increasingly being outsourced to AI? They are using chat to write assignments, tests, emails, letters of recommendation, sort and grade papers. (note this is based on teachers outwardly admitting this, not just on suspected incidents) Students are noticing and feeling very conflicted about the double standard, not to mention declining quality of interactions and learning experiences!
Seems like there was a good reason for oral exams and hand-written in-class essays.
So basically, AI will be grading other AI.🤦♀️
I think instruction will flip from spending class time in lecture with assignments completed after class to lectures online and using class time to complete assignments. This of course brings its own problems, but having an instructor available for feedback as one completes an assignment could be very helpful.
In class assignments, no advance notice, no phones, no computers, good old pencil and paper.
How do we incorporate AI without eliminating deeper thought? That's the threat, right? Maybe we treat AI as we would junk food.
My daughter’s in college. Even knowing the programs are often wrong, she uses AI to make sure her paper doesn’t come back as AI. She’s almost paranoid about it.
I do handwritten exams and have also done interviews… but I am still trying to figure out how to teach skills in what research papers used to teach: finding and reading sources, judging their quality, synthesizing info from them to find a conclusion and articulating how that fits together— without using research papers, which can be replicated with AI and even when I know they were, I cannot ironclad prove it. How does one teach THAT set of skills? Or is it just unnecessary to have them? I hope not; those are skills that I think ultimately make a wiser human.
I think it's interesting that the word "assess" comes from the Latin meaning "to sit beside." We really do have to "sit beside" our students to truly know where they are in their learning. Do you know what AI can't do? Sit in a seat in my classroom with a pencil in hand and write in a blue book. Sometimes the best way forward is to turn around... the only answer I have is to think about how my teachers and professors assessed me many years ago: in person.
One high school in my area has gone to pencil and paper for writing assignments. Done in class.
I spent this past year teaching composition courses and was talking with a friend and co-teacher about a common assignment we use, which is a scavenger hunt for finding sources and developing keywords. When we were discussing this, a student of hers came to our shared office to talk about an assigned paper and the scavenger hunt assignment came up; the student didn’t complete it because the university library had implemented an AI search bot that developed keywords, research questions, and source summaries for you. We just looked at each other - the skills that assignment was meant to teach were rendered useless by the university.
In the course of our daily homeschooling, my kids and I use AI periodically, and overall, I think it has been a great benefit. It hasn’t affected us negatively at all, and I see no reason why it should.
Have you read Dr Cooney Horvath's THE DIGITAL DELUSION? From an academic, this book is accessible and uses the research to back the claims in ways not done to this point. It highlights current research that show what is best and highlights the LACK OF REPLICATED RESEARCH for things being used in schools at the moment claiming to be effective. Between that and the books that Jonathon Haidt has done, and the articles you've highlighted, I'm starting to see the voices sounding the alarms in academia and it is nice to not feel alone!!!!
Plato and the Academy, walking along the stoa, talking about the different aspects of the number *8* or the meaning of virtue. An idea whose time has come again.
John Warner is also great on the topic of so-called "ai" (large language models, super-fancy autocomplete) and student writing substack.com/@biblioracle
My son and I just had a conversation about this the other night, he is a rising senior in college. He said that some classes now have a standard that when they run a paper through an AI checker it has to be below a certain percentage of AI generated. My son loves to write and is a natural writer. He is so frustrated because names of journals come up as AI because you have to type it exactly correct and that is easily searched by the program as being copied. Same with quotes that are required to use and correctly cited. Even a common phrase you might use because the AI program can see it is a phrase a lot of papers have used before. He now spends more time checking and then changing his own words so it meets those percentages.
Nathanael Gallagher
That article had a very abrupt ending. Was it written by AI? The audio of the article was AI generated. I'm so concerned about humanity's future...
If I’m paying for a college degree I would expect to pay less if a bot was putting together modules and doing the grading. I doubt colleges are going to discount these degrees, though, and professors aren’t going to accept a pay cut for doing less work.
At what point are we going to have the discussion that education should no longer be compulsory? If it's all being done by machines in both directions, why bother spending resources on students who have no desire to learn or problem solve? If you don't want to be in school, then don't go.
At this point it seems like students are using AI to complete tasks assigned by teachers using AI. It’s so disheartening. Coming up with ideas yourself is hard, rewarding work. Outsourcing all of that work to AI makes us all dumber. AI is designed to tell you what you want to hear, not help you wrestle with uncomfortable ideas.
Sobering…
It’s so, so disheartening.
Child #4 is back for a week after completing the first year of the MFA in Shakespeare and Performance, and in celebration we are watching one of the most brilliant comedic movies ever made. ... See MoreSee Less
5 days ago
Out of genuine curiosity..what does one do with an MFA in Shakespeare and Performance (aside from teach Shakespeare and Performance)?
Never heard of it. I'm so glad I get to watch it for the first time. Thank you for sharing!
Love Danny Kaye - he was a brilliant man, and not just in the areas of acting and comedy. He was a master of Chinese cuisine. A true Renaissance man.
#4 is darling as can be!
The pellet with the poison is in the chalice with the palace!
The pellet with the poison's in the vessel with the pestle; the chalice from the palace has the brew that is true"
We LOVE the Court Jester! When I was a lad I was gloomy and sad as I was from the day I was born!
Danny Kaye!! Which one is this? I've probably seen it but can't remember the name. Wait is it The Inspector General?
This was my daughter’s favorite movie and she had us project it outside for her friends at her 12th birthday party during that crazy COVID year. It brought joy and fun to a scary time. It’ll always be one of our family favorites.
Court jester is a family fave!!
my husband and I watched this tonight for the first time and we laughed hardly I’m so thankful you posted this… Hard to find an enjoyable movie
My parents raised us on Danny Kaye. I do think The Court Jester is my favorite!
Oh my gosh- used to watch that frequently with our kids when they were younger. We even have the VHS tape.
We just rewatched this last night! If I have to watch it again soon I will have to throw myself from the highest turrett! Jk - this is def a family favorite 🤩
Court Jester is one of the BEST!!!
Love it!
I use to watch this with my Grandma growing up!
Sooo good!!! Introduced my kids to this at an early age.
A good friend introduced me to this movie!
If you haven’t seen it, may I recommend MY all time favorite, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead. So good.
This is one of my favorite movies to watch with my kiddos!
One of our favorites!
Love that movie!!
This is a family favourite! ☺️
Perfect movie.
Visit me on Substack for my most recent historical reflections:
... See MoreSee Less
2 weeks ago

