Tools & Platforms
I’m a Teacher Who Has Integrated AI and ChatGPT Into My Classroom

I was anxious the first time I dabbled in ChatGPT. That’s probably an understatement. I actually feared that someone was watching over me, lurking in cyberspace, waiting to sound alarm bells when I typed a certain phrase or combination of words into the blank search bar.
I’m a journalist and journalism educator. I teach kids about sourcing and how to avoid plagiarizing material. In my media ethics class, I ask them to sign a contract saying they won’t use other people’s material.
So what the heck was I doing playing with AI? And what if I actually liked it?
Spoiler alert: I did, and it’s kind of awesome.
ChatGPT has become helpful for me
Teachers have focused so much on how our students might use AI to cheat that we may have forgotten how it can help us in the classroom and at home.
I’m using AI (specifically ChatGPT) in practical, everyday ways.
I recently completed a 16-week intensive ELA and math tutoring program in our local school district. The material I was given for the program didn’t work well for my kids, so I ran it through ChatGPT to make it more digestible.
With AI, I can customize my lessons — quickly. Tens and ones review? No problem. Bar graph with ice cream flavors? Done. First grade fractions? Been there, done that, too. I’ve even started playing around with Bingo designs for fun.
I’m also using AI to play teacher at home. When my 6th grader needs to review states of matter or the history of ancient China, we turn to AI together. ChatGPT whips up multiple-choice quizzes (with answer keys) faster than I can make dinner. The same thing goes for studying India’s monsoon season. Once, I even asked AI to create a quiz on how to spot fake news.
I recently looked back on my ChatGPT history and realized how much I had used AI to generate study guides, like the one I made for “The Outsiders,” by S.E. Hinton. My son got an A on that quiz.
I don’t think AI will ever replace me
As much as I’ve come to rely on AI, I’ve learned that it isn’t going to solve all my classroom conundrums.
For example, it won’t comfort a crying student because he or she did poorly on a test and fears her parents will ground her. AI isn’t going to help me decide when a student is sick enough to visit the school nurse. It’s not going to help me figure out why a student understands one concept of math but can’t grasp another.
But given all the complexities and challenges of being an educator right now, I’ll take the help, even if it means double-checking all of the facts.
I’m leaning into AI, but cautiously
I still feel a little guilty when I ask AI to check a sentence’s grammar or to eliminate redundancies in my writing. I’m not sure if it’s because I asked for help or because the work is often great.
Still, ChatGPT has made me more efficient as a teacher. I can easily whip up study guides that benefit my students and tailor lesson plans to them. All of this frees up time for me to connect with my students more easily and focus on other tasks.
I’m glad I took a leap of faith, and I plan on exploring AI as it continues to grow.
Tools & Platforms
Duke AI program emphasizes critical thinking for job security :: WRAL.com

Duke’s AI program is spearheaded by a professor who is not just teaching, he also built his own AI model.
Professor Jon Reifschneider says we’ve already entered a new era of teaching and learning across disciplines.
He says, “We have folks that go into healthcare after they graduate, go into finance, energy, education, etc. We want them to bring with them a set of skills and knowledge in AI, so that they can figure out: ‘How can I go solve problems in my field using AI?'”
He wants his students to become literate in AI, which is a challenge in a field he describes as a moving target.
“I think for most people, AI is kind of a mysterious black box that can do somewhat magical things, and I think that’s very risky to think that way, because you don’t develop an appreciation of when you should use it and when you shouldn’t use it,” Reifschneider told WRAL News.
Student Harshitha Rasamsetty said she is learning the strengths and shortcomings of AI.
“We always look at the biases and privacy concerns and always consider the user,” she said.
The students in Duke’s engineering master’s programs come from all backgrounds, countries, even ages. Jared Bailey paused his insurance career in Florida to get a handle on the AI being deployed company-wide.
He was already using AI tools when he wondered, “What if I could crack them open and adjust them myself and make them better?”
John Ernest studied engineering in undergrad, but sought job security in AI.
“I hear news every day that AI is replacing this job, AI is replacing that job,” he said. “I came to a conclusion that I should be a part of a person building AI, not be a part of a person getting replaced by AI.”
Reifschneider thinks warnings about AI taking jobs are overblown.
In fact, he wants his students to come away understanding that humans have a quality AI can’t replace. That’s critical thinking.
Reifschneider says AI “still relies on humans to guide it in the right direction, to give it the right prompts, to ask the right questions, to give it the right instructions.”
“If you can’t think, well, AI can’t take you very far,” Bailey said. “It’s a car with no gas.”
Reifschneider told WRAL that he thinks children as young as elementary school students should begin learning how to use AI, when it’s appropriate to do so, and how to use it safely.
WRAL News went inside Wake County schools to see how it is being used and what safeguards the district is using to protect students. Watch that story Wednesday on WRAL News.
Tools & Platforms
WA state schools superintendent seeks $10M for AI in classrooms

This article originally appeared on TVW News.
Washington’s top K-12 official is asking lawmakers to bankroll a statewide push to bring artificial intelligence tools and training into classrooms in 2026, even as new test data show slow, uneven academic recovery and persistent achievement gaps.
Superintendent of Public Instruction Chris Reykdal told TVW’s Inside Olympia that he will request about $10 million in the upcoming supplemental budget for a statewide pilot program to purchase AI tutoring tools — beginning with math — and fund teacher training. He urged legislators to protect education from cuts, make structural changes to the tax code and act boldly rather than leaving local districts to fend for themselves. “If you’re not willing to make those changes, don’t take it out on kids,” Reykdal said.
The funding push comes as new Smarter Balanced assessment results show gradual improvement but highlight persistent inequities. State test scores have ticked upward, and student progress rates between grades are now mirroring pre-pandemic trends. Still, higher-poverty communities are not improving as quickly as more affluent peers. About 57% of eighth graders met foundational math progress benchmarks — better than most states, Reykdal noted, but still leaving four in 10 students short of university-ready standards by 10th grade.
Reykdal cautioned against reading too much into a single exam, emphasizing that Washington consistently ranks near the top among peer states. He argued that overall college-going rates among public school students show they are more prepared than the test suggests. “Don’t grade the workload — grade the thinking,” he said.
Artificial intelligence, Reykdal said, has moved beyond the margins and into the mainstream of daily teaching and learning: “AI is in the middle of everything, because students are making it in a big way. Teachers are doing it. We’re doing it in our everyday lives.”
OSPI has issued human-centered AI guidance and directed districts to update technology policies, clarifying how AI can be used responsibly and what constitutes academic dishonesty. Reykdal warned against long-term contracts with unproven vendors, but said larger platforms with stronger privacy practices will likely endure. He framed AI as a tool for expanding customized learning and preparing students for the labor market, while acknowledging the need to teach ethical use.
Reykdal pressed lawmakers to think more like executives anticipating global competition rather than waiting for perfect solutions. “If you wait until it’s perfect, it will be a decade from now, and the inequalities will be massive,” he said.
With test scores climbing slowly and AI transforming classrooms, Reykdal said the Legislature’s next steps will be decisive in shaping whether Washington narrows achievement gaps — or lets them widen.
TVW News originally published this article on Sept. 11, 2025.
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