One of the questions I get asked most often through Educators Technology is some version of: where should I start learning ...
If you teach English learners, you already know the daily puzzle: a classroom full of students at five or six different ...
Art and music classrooms are built on something AI will never fully replicate: the deeply personal act of creating something ...
History and social studies classrooms run on stories, primary sources, and the ability to think critically about both. AI ...
Flint provides inline writing feedback based on teacher-configured rubrics and guardrails. You set the boundaries for what AI can and can’t do, which prevents the tool from writing for students.
Science is a subject built on doing. Students learn chemistry through titrations, biology through dissections, physics through motion experiments, and earth science through field observations. That ...
Microsoft Math Solver is a free tool that uses AI to recognize both printed and handwritten math. It’s particularly strong with geometric proofs and interactive graphing, and it pulls learning ...
Synthesia is the most discussed avatar tool in education. You pick from 230+ avatars, type your script, and it generates a video with natural lip-syncing in 140+ languages. It can also convert ...
If you’ve ever spent a Sunday afternoon building worksheets from scratch, formatting questions, writing answer keys, and adjusting everything for three different reading levels, you already know how ...
AI has quietly worked its way into almost every corner of teaching. Lesson planning, assessment design, rubric creation, ...
Rubrics are one of the most useful assessment tools a teacher can have. A well-designed rubric tells students exactly what ...
When students sit down to research a topic, the process usually involves bouncing between Google, Wikipedia, a database like JSTOR, and whatever AI chatbot they have open on a second tab. Perplexity ...