Education
AI integration drives new approaches in isle education
As artificial intelligence becomes increasingly embedded in classrooms and at home, educators across Hawaii say the rise of personalized learning is beginning to reshape how students learn, and in some cases, whether they attend traditional schools at all.
Justin Lai, an educational technologist at La Pietra — Hawai’i School for Girls, describes AI as a powerful partner for both teachers and students by supporting creativity, closing knowledge gaps and helping to organize complex information.
Lai said La Pietra uses AI as a tool to help students generate ideas and create content, as a way to provide individualized academic support, and as a resource to help organize and make sense of complex information. Students use AI to brainstorm ideas, translate difficult concepts and manage overwhelming research tasks, while teachers are beginning to integrate curriculum content into AI platforms to create customized, interactive learning experiences.
Still, Lai emphasized that keeping pace with AI’s rapid evolution is a challenge even for those deeply immersed in the field. Because students are already using AI tools at home — often beyond the reach of school policies — he said schools must engage in open, community-wide communication.
La Pietra is actively exploring how AI can serve as a creative collaborator in design thinking and accelerate project research.
One promising example, according to Lai, is “vibe coding,” an emerging practice where students use AI to develop software more easily and intuitively.
“Students can learn to adaptively use new technology while applying skills in relevant contexts,” Lai said, noting that such innovation is especially important in Hawaii, where communities grapple with high living costs, environmental concerns and talent retention.
Ultimately, he believes the schools best positioned to thrive will be those that use AI “to enhance human connection and community engagement, not replace it.”
The Hawaii Association of Independent Schools has seen surging interest in AI training across its membership.
“It’s been the No. 1 requested area of professional development by our schools,” said Deanna D’Olier, HAIS executive director-elect. She added that AI integration in the classroom is not just about efficiency, it’s about access and support.
“My hope is that AI is a supplement to school,” D’Olier said. “It helps keep learning moving in real time in ways that are incredibly difficult for any person to do, given the demands of traditional schooling.”
Homeschooling support
The emergence of AI as an educational tool coincides with the rise in home-schooling. A reason is that technology, and increasingly AI, is making the practice more viable and effective, according to D’Olier.
According to the Johns Hopkins School of Education, the number of home-schooled students across the U.S. grew during the 2023–2024 school year even as the overall K–12 population declined due to falling birth rates.
In Hawaii, home-school participation spiked during the COVID- 19 pandemic and has remained significantly higher than pre-COVID levels, though still a small percentage of all school-age children.
In the 2008-2009 school year, 1,555 students in Hawaii were reported as home-schooled. That number hit 6,438 in 2020-2021, representing just 2.7% of Hawaii’s K-12 students.
For the just-ended 2024-2025 school year, 4,161 Hawaii students were home-schooled, down from the peak but still nearly triple the number from 15 years ago.
D’Olier said the home-schooling trend in Hawaii mirrors the national movement but is also shaped by local dynamics, particularly for student athletes, military families or those seeking flexible or specialized learning environments.
“By home-schooling your child, you can (teach them) anywhere,” she said. “You’re not tethered to the brick and mortar.”
Families may also choose home-schooling for academic, social-emotional or financial reasons, particularly if they lack access to a school that meets their needs but cannot afford private tuition, which continues to increase due to inflation.
The rise in AI tools also has provided more support for home-school parents and students. These tools are making it easier for both home-schooled and traditionally enrolled students to get tailored academic support and explore subjects more deeply on their own time.
“AI will inevitably help keep students on pace with their learning,” D’Olier said. “It can serve as kind of that private tutor … helping them better understand whatever it is they’re covering.”
New tools like Khan Academy’s AI-powered learning guide, Khanmigo, allow students to receive real-time academic support, ask questions, and stay on track — even without a traditional classroom structure. Khanmigo acts like a personal tutor and coach, helping students brainstorm ideas, work through math problems step by step and explore subjects through guided conversation.
The platform is free for teachers, while families can subscribe for $4 per month to gain full access at home.
The Curipod Classroom is an AI-powered lesson platform that lets teachers create interactive, standards-aligned lessons with slides, polls and activities on any topic and in any language, while giving students real-time, personalized feedback to boost engagement and learning.
OpenAI’s ChatGPT, already widely used by teens, can help students brainstorm ideas, summarize reading material, draft essays, solve math problems or translate difficult concepts into plain language.
In traditional schools
The state Department of Education has been actively integrating AI to improve both teaching efficiency and student learning outcomes.
DOE describes artificial intelligence as technology that can predict outcomes, make suggestions or help with decisions based on goals set by humans — following the definition laid out in the 2020 National Artificial Intelligence Act.
AI is used in public schools to automate tasks like grading and lesson planning and support personalized tutoring for students. Through a cross-office collaboration model, the department has launched a public-facing AI website, initiated professional development sessions, and is running pilot programs such as MagicSchool to test AI tools in classrooms.
At the private Mid-Pacific Institute in Manoa Valley, preparations for AI integration began just months after ChatGPT’s public release in November 2022. The school established an AI Council made up of educators, students and industry professionals to help shape its approach, and began rolling out professional development for teachers at all grade levels.
“We knew that we needed to up-skill our teachers as quickly as possible,” said Brian Grantham, Mid-Pacific’s director of educational technology.
Mid-Pacific’s focus ranges from building AI literacy across all grades — helping students understand what AI is, how it works, the potential biases and errors in AI outputs, and the importance of validating those outputs — and developing AI certification classes open to faculty from any school.
“Most importantly, we knew that we needed to show our students and teachers myriad ways AI platforms could be leveraged to deepen their subject matter understanding, compared to cognitive offloading and taking shortcuts,” Grantham said.
Educators say this convergence of AI-powered personalization and a growing array of educational models marks a pivotal moment for K-12 learning. But it also brings new responsibilities.
Grantham, Lai and D’Olier all emphasized the importance of ethical AI use, strong data privacy protections and professional training.
“There’s not a school in Hawaii that isn’t actively engaged in establishing effective use policies and safety features around AI,” D’Olier said, adding that OpenAI, Google and other companies are working directly with educational institutions to develop safe, school-ready platforms.
Ultimately, Hawaii’s independent schools are betting on AI not to replace human educators, but to amplify them.
“Counter-intuitive as it may seem,” Lai said, “AI has the potential to strengthen the most human aspects of education by freeing teachers from routine tasks, allowing more time for meaningful relationships, hands-on learning and authentic community engagement.”
Education
Blunkett urges ministers to use ‘incredible sensitivity’ in changing Send system in England | Special educational needs
Ministers must use “incredible sensitivity” in making changes to the special educational needs system, former education secretary David Blunkett has said, as the government is urged not to drop education, health and care plans (EHCPs).
Lord Blunkett, who went through the special needs system when attending a residential school for blind children, said ministers would have to tread carefully.
The former home secretary in Tony Blair’s government also urged the government to reassure parents that it was looking for “a meaningful replacement” for EHCPs, which guarantee more than 600,000 children and young people individual support in learning.
Blunkett said he sympathised with the challenge facing Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, saying: “It’s absolutely clear that the government will need to do this with incredible sensitivity and with a recognition it’s going to be a bumpy road.”
He said government proposals due in the autumn to reexamine Send provision in England were not the same as welfare changes, largely abandoned last week, which were aimed at reducing spending. “They put another billion in [to Send provision] and nobody noticed,” Blunkett said, adding: “We’ve got to reduce the fear of change.”
Earlier Helen Hayes, the Labour MP who chairs the cross-party Commons education select committee, called for Downing Street to commit to EHCPs, saying this was the only way to combat mistrust among many families with Send children.
“I think at this stage that would be the right thing to do,” she told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme. “We have been looking, as the education select committee, at the Send system for the last several months. We have heard extensive evidence from parents, from organisations that represent parents, from professionals and from others who are deeply involved in the system, which is failing so many children and families at the moment.
“One of the consequences of that failure is that parents really have so little trust and confidence in the Send system at the moment. And the government should take that very seriously as it charts a way forward for reform.”
A letter to the Guardian on Monday, signed by dozens of special needs and disability charities and campaigners, warned against government changes to the Send system that would restrict or abolish EHCPs.
Labour MPs who spoke to the Guardian are worried ministers are unable to explain essential details of the special educational needs shake-up being considered in the schools white paper to be published in October.
Downing Street has refused to rule out ending EHCPs, while stressing that no decisions have yet been taken ahead of a white paper on Send provision to be published in October.
Keir Starmer’s deputy spokesperson said: “I’ll just go back to the broader point that the system is not working and is in desperate need of reform. That’s why we want to actively work with parents, families, parliamentarians to make sure we get this right.”
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Speaking later in the Commons, Phillipson said there was “no responsibility I take more seriously” than that to more vulnerable children. She said it was a “serious and complex area” that “we as a government are determined to get right”.
The education secretary said: “There will always be a legal right to the additional support children with Send need, and we will protect it. But alongside that, there will be a better system with strengthened support, improved access and more funding.”
Dr Will Shield, an educational psychologist from the University of Exeter, said rumoured proposals that limit EHCPs – potentially to pupils in special schools – were “deeply problematic”.
Shield said: “Mainstream schools frequently rely on EHCPs to access the funding and oversight needed to support children effectively. Without a clear, well-resourced alternative, families will fear their children are not able to access the support they need to achieve and thrive.”
Paul Whiteman, general secretary of the National Association of Head Teachers, said: “Any reforms in this space will likely provoke strong reactions and it will be crucial that the government works closely with both parents and schools every step of the way.”
Education
The Guardian view on special needs reform: children’s needs must be the priority as the system is redesigned | Editorial
Children with special educational needs and disabilities (Send) must be supported through the education system to fulfil their potential as fully as possible. This is the bottom line for the families of the 1.6 million children with a recognised additional learning need in England, and all those who support them. It needs to be the government’s priority too.
There is no question that the rising number of children receiving extra help has placed pressure on schools and councils. There is wide agreement that the current trajectory is not sustainable. But if plans for reform are shaped around the aim of saving money by removing entitlements, rather than meeting the needs of children by improving schools, they should be expected to fail.
If ministers did not already know this, the Save Our Children’s Rights campaign launched this week ought to help. As it stands, there is no policy of restricting access to the education, health and care plans (EHCPs) that impose a legal duty on councils to provide specified support. But ministers’ criticisms of the adversarial aspects of the current system have led families to conclude that they should prepare for an attempt to remove their enforceable rights. Christine Lenehan, who advises the government, has indicated that the scope of EHCPs could be narrowed, while stressing a commitment to consultation. Tom Rees, who chairs the department for education’s specialist group, bluntly terms it “a bad system”.
Mr Rees’s panel has had its term extended until April. The education select committee will present the conclusions of its inquiry into the Send crisis in the autumn. Both should be listened to carefully. But the education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, and her team also need to show that they are capable of engaging beyond the circle of appointed experts and parliamentarians. Parents can make their views known through constituency MPs. Their voices and perspectives need to be heard in Whitehall too.
This is a hugely sensitive policy area. There is nothing parents care more about than the opportunities provided to their children, and this concern is intensified when those children have additional needs. Some positive steps have been taken during Labour’s first year. Increased capital spending on school buildings should make a difference to in-house provision, which relies on the availability of suitable spaces. Ministers are right, too, to focus on teacher training, while inclusion has been given greater prominence in the inspection framework. As with the NHS, there is a welcome emphasis on spreading best practice.
But big questions remain. Families are fearful that accountability mechanisms are going to be removed, and want to know how the new “inclusive mainstream” will be defined and judged. Councils are concerned about what happens to their £5bn in special needs budget deficits, when the so-called statutory override expires in 2028. The concerning role of private equity in special education – which mirrors changes in the children’s social care market – also needs addressing.
Schools need to adapt so that a greater range of pupils can be accommodated. The issue is how the government manages that process. The hope must be that the lesson ministers take from their failure on welfare is that consultation on highly sensitive changes, affecting millions of lives, must be thorough. In order to make change, they must build consensus.
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Education
How AI is Transforming Education in Africa
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is reshaping industries across the globe, and education in Africa is no exception. From personalized learning platforms to AI-driven teacher training, the continent is witnessing a surge in innovative solutions tackling longstanding challenges. In this Q&A Insights piece, we dive into how AI is revolutionizing education, addressing questions from our iAfrica community about its impact, opportunities, and hurdles.
What are the biggest challenges in African education that AI can address?
Africa’s education sector faces issues like limited access to quality resources, teacher shortages, and diverse linguistic needs. AI can bridge these gaps in practical ways. For instance, AI-powered platforms like Eneza Education provide mobile-based learning in local languages, reaching students in remote areas with affordable, interactive content. Adaptive learning systems analyze student performance to tailor lessons, ensuring kids in overcrowded classrooms get personalized attention. AI also supports teacher training through virtual simulations, helping educators refine skills without costly in-person workshops.
“AI can democratize education by making high-quality resources accessible to students in rural areas.” – Dr. Aisha Mwinyi, EdTech Researcher
How is AI being used to improve access to education?
Access is a critical issue, with millions of African children out of school due to distance, poverty, or conflict. AI is stepping in with scalable solutions. Chatbots and virtual tutors, like those developed by Ustad Mobile, deliver bite-sized lessons via SMS or WhatsApp, working on basic phones for low-income communities. In Nigeria, uLesson uses AI to stream offline-capable video lessons, bypassing unreliable internet. These tools ensure learning continues in areas with limited infrastructure, from refugee camps to rural villages.
Can AI help with language barriers in education?
Absolutely. Africa’s linguistic diversity—over 2,000 languages—creates unique challenges. AI-driven translation tools, such as those integrated into Kolibri by Learning Equality, adapt content into local languages like Swahili, Yoruba, or Amharic. Speech-to-text and text-to-speech systems also help non-literate learners engage with digital materials. These innovations make education inclusive, especially for marginalized groups who speak minority languages.
What are some standout African AI education startups?
The continent is buzzing with homegrown talent. M-Shule in Kenya uses AI to deliver personalized SMS-based learning, focusing on primary school students. Chalkboard Education, operating in Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire, offers offline e-learning platforms for universities, using AI to track progress. South Africa’s Siyavula combines AI with open-source textbooks to provide math and science practice, serving millions of learners. These startups show Africa isn’t just adopting AI—it’s innovating with it.
What concerns exist about AI in education?
While the potential is huge, concerns linger. Data privacy is a big one—students’ personal information must be protected, especially in regions with weak regulations. There’s also the risk of over-reliance on tech, which could sideline human teachers. Affordability is another hurdle; AI solutions must be low-cost to scale. Experts emphasize the need for ethical AI frameworks, like those being developed by AI4D Africa, to ensure tools are culturally relevant and equitable.
“We must balance AI’s efficiency with the human touch that makes education transformative.” – Prof. Kwame Osei, Education Policy Expert
How can policymakers support AI in education?
Policymakers play a pivotal role. Investing in digital infrastructure—think affordable internet and device subsidies—is crucial. Governments should also fund local AI research, as seen in Rwanda’s Digital Skills Program, which trains youth to build EdTech solutions. Public-private partnerships can scale pilots, while clear regulations on data use build trust. Our community suggests tax incentives for EdTech startups to spur innovation.
What’s next for AI in African education?
The future is bright but demands action. AI could power virtual reality classrooms, making immersive learning accessible in underfunded schools. Predictive analytics might identify at-risk students early, reducing dropout rates. But scaling these requires collaboration—between governments, startups, and communities. As iAfrica’s Q&A Forum shows, Africans are eager to shape this future, asking sharp questions and sharing bold ideas.
Got more questions about AI in education? Drop them in our Q&A Forum and join the conversation shaping Africa’s tech-driven future.
Got more questions about AI in education? Drop them in an email to ai@africa.com and join the conversation shaping Africa’s tech-driven future.
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