Education
Lynchburg, Va., Schools Refine AI Policies, Guidelines

(TNS) — Artificial intelligence has entered K-12 classrooms, and Lynchburg-area school divisions are responding with guidelines for teachers and students.
Virginia public school divisions follow state guidelines for AI integration throughout education, and the state Department of Education said AI brings tremendous potential to transform education at all levels.
“By enabling more efficient, universal and deeper learning, AI can unlock new realms of knowledge that were previously unimaginable,” VDOE said.
Lynchburg City Schools said it follows this VDOE guidance, which encourages the responsible and effective use of AI in schools.
“Our I.T. and Teaching & Learning departments are actively developing ways to embrace this technology to help both staff and students learn how to use it safely, appropriately and effectively,” LCS said in a statement. “While this work is still in progress, we look forward to sharing more as our efforts continue to take shape.”
Bedford County Public Schools said although the division doesn’t currently have a formal AI policy, the Information Technology and Instructional Technology departments worked together last year to provide teachers with AI guidelines and “best practices on responsible classroom use, emphasizing and ensuring AI supports, not replaces, teaching and critical thinking.”
“Teachers must provide context, feedback and humanity,” one of BCPS’s AI guiding principles said. “AI should not overpower the critical thinking, judgment or morality of the student.”
The BCPS school board discussed AI at its August meeting, and Deputy Superintendent Karen Woodford said students should be told not just about the negatives of AI.
“Is what you’re getting accurate?” Woodford said.
She said students should be aware of what AI can do, but also how to problem-solve and use it correctly.
“We’re not going to be able to keep our kids from AI,” Woodford said. “We’re not going to be able to keep them from computers. So, I feel like a better way is to try to teach them the responsibility of that and the responsibility of being online.”
Campbell County Public Schools launched division-wide AI guidelines this fall, which CCPS Director of Instructional Technology Marc Hudson presented at the school board’s August meeting.
Hudson said CCPS knows students already are using AI personally.
“But we want to be able to use and incorporate this into our digital citizenship,” he said. “Show them the correct ways to use it, the safety, the concerns with that.”
He said CCPS sees safe and appropriate use for students as brainstorming, tutoring, creating study guides and practicing skills. It should be teacher-guided, developmentally appropriate and properly cited when contributing to academic work.
Prohibited use for students includes submitting AI-generated work as their own, inputting personal, sensitive or educational data into non-approved AI tools and generating inappropriate, biased or misleading content.
“It’s here, and it’s helpful,” Hudson said. “We want to see it as a way to help kids make decisions critically.”
CCPS Assistant Superintendent for Instruction Amy Hale said CCPS wants to make sure its AI guidelines are accurate and that they meet the division’s needs.
“We may need to adjust them as we move along too,” Hale said.
Hudson also presented information on the division’s decision to use the AI platform MagicSchool this school year.
He said CCPS will train staff on the program through September with hopes to make it available for students in the spring.
“I think the teachers need to know first and feel comfortable with it because there are teachers that are scared of it and don’t trust it and don’t want to use it,” said Karen Tanner, Sunburst District representative on the county school board.
Hale said an advantage of students using MagicSchool instead of ChatGPT is it doesn’t feed language models and is not “wide open.”
“For the safety purposes, we need our students starting here first,” Hale said.
Hudson said learning about AI prepares students for the future.
“This is something that’s going to be here, it’s something that’s going to be needed,” he said. “It’s initiatives that will be part of their lives going forward without a doubt.”
© 2025 The News & Advance, Lynchburg, Va. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Education
Generative AI reshapes global education: Opportunities and risks

Generative artificial intelligence, or GenAI, is rapidly transforming the landscape of global education, with researchers stressing both the scale of opportunities and the depth of challenges. A new international study published in SAGE Open presents the first large-scale evidence of how generative AI has reshaped research, teaching, and learning in the 21st century.
The paper, titled “Are Generative AI Technologies Transforming Education for the 21st Century? Research Trends, Challenges, and Benefits,” provides an in-depth look at how education systems and academic research are responding to the rise of tools such as ChatGPT, GPT-4, and other generative models.
How has research on generative AI in education expanded?
The study finds that research output in this field was negligible before 2020, but momentum built rapidly from 2021, culminating in a surge after 2023. By 2024, scholarly production exceeded 1,800 publications in a single year, reflecting how generative AI technologies have become central to debates on the future of education. The rapid growth highlights not only academic interest but also the urgency of addressing new challenges created by generative AI in schools and universities.
The analysis identifies leading academic outlets driving the conversation. Journals such as Education and Information Technologies, Computers and Education: Artificial Intelligence, and Education Sciences emerged as the most influential platforms publishing research in this area. Highly cited studies concentrated on key issues such as the impact of ChatGPT on assessment systems, the risks to academic integrity, and the potential for generative AI to personalize learning.
The authors point out that this surge of academic attention reflects the disruptive influence of generative AI. Once viewed as experimental, these tools are now embedded in both teaching practices and student learning habits. The scale and pace of publications demonstrate that the academic community is mobilizing to study not only the potential benefits but also the far-reaching risks of generative AI adoption.
Who leads global research and what are the main themes?
The study provides a global mapping of research trends. The United States emerged as the clear leader in terms of the number of publications, followed by Australia and the United Kingdom. Interestingly, Singapore distinguished itself with one of the highest citation impacts despite producing fewer studies, suggesting that its contributions carry disproportionate influence. This global spread demonstrates that generative AI is not confined to a single region but is shaping education debates worldwide.
The bibliometric analysis also revealed three dominant research clusters. The first cluster focuses on the integration of generative AI into higher education, especially its impact on student learning outcomes and academic integrity. The second cluster addresses the technical and ethical implications of large language models in educational settings, reflecting concerns about bias, transparency, and governance. The third cluster centers on the role of generative AI in medical and nursing education, where AI-driven tools are used for simulations, skill-building, and clinical decision support.
These themes illustrate the dual role of generative AI as both an enabler and a disruptor. It enables educators to introduce innovative teaching methods and support personalized learning experiences, while at the same time disrupting traditional academic norms by challenging established practices of assessment and integrity. The geographic distribution of research suggests that while developed nations are leading in volume, emerging economies are beginning to participate actively in shaping this dialogue.
What benefits and challenges does generative AI bring to education?
The study stresses that the benefits of generative AI are significant. AI-powered tools can deliver personalized learning pathways, encourage creativity, and increase efficiency in administrative and academic tasks. In higher education, they have the potential to transform curricula, automate grading, and provide real-time feedback to students. In medical education, they are being deployed for realistic simulations and competency-based training.
At the same time, the challenges are substantial. Generative AI raises concerns about plagiarism, reduced critical thinking, and dependency on machine-generated outputs. Ethical issues such as data privacy, misinformation, and intellectual property rights compound these risks. The research warns that without strong governance frameworks, generative AI could undermine the credibility of academic institutions and weaken trust in education systems.
The authors argue that educational policymakers and institutions must act quickly to balance benefits with risks. The development of clear guidelines for responsible AI use, investment in AI literacy programs, and strategies to strengthen academic integrity are identified as urgent needs. Without such measures, the study cautions that the promises of generative AI could be overshadowed by its pitfalls.
Education
Upping Your Game – The Future of Compliance Education: Leveraging AI for Targeted Training | Thomas Fox – Compliance Evangelist

This podcast series, sponsored by Ethico and co-hosted with Ethico co-CEO Nick Gallo, hopes to meet Hui Chen’s challenge. They will discuss how See more +
This podcast series, sponsored by Ethico and co-hosted with Ethico co-CEO Nick Gallo, hopes to meet Hui Chen’s challenge. They will discuss how compliance professionals can ‘Up Their Game’ by utilizing currently existing Generative AI (GenAI) tools to improve their compliance programs significantly. As compliance professionals, it is critical to recognize that this moment is not merely about incremental improvements but about elevating our profession to an entirely new level of effectiveness, efficiency, and organizational value.
In this episode of Upping Your Game, Tom and Nick discuss the transformative potential of AI in compliance education. They explore how traditional compliance training methods with PowerPoints and annual tests are being surpassed by more dynamic, targeted approaches. Emphasizing the importance of delivering relevant messages to the right audience at the right time, they discuss how AI can integrate various training strategies and data-driven insights to enhance compliance. By tailoring content for specific roles and using crowd-sourced intelligence and accurate input data, compliance education can become more effective and engaging. The conversation highlights the importance of reducing organizational volatility by employing more targeted, frequent, and engaging training methods.
Key highlights:
• Evolution of Compliance Training
• The Role of AI in Compliance Education
• Targeted Training and Its Benefits
• Crowdsourcing and Input for Effective Training
• Reducing Volatility Through Compliance Education
Resources:
• Upping Your Game-How Compliance and Risk Management Move to 2030 and Beyond on Amazon.com: https://a.co/d/6kKYANX
• Nick Gallo on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ngallo/
• Ethico: http://ethico.com/ See less –
Education
Here’s How Teachers Really Feel About the Rise of AI in K-12 Education

Artificial intelligence has been rapidly changing the K-12 education landscape—from providing opportunities for personalized learning to assisting with nonteaching tasks. As the new school year kicks into gear, how do educators expect to see AI incorporated into their school and classes?
EdWeek reporting shows that not many schools have policies in place to guide AI use just yet, although it’s a top-of-mind issue for educators and policymakers. According to a recent survey of state education technology officials, 40% of respondents said their states had released AI guidance, and supporting professional development on the issue was a top priority.
Additionally, educators remain divided on whether AI should be used in the classroom at all. There is concern among some educators about how AI may affect students’ critical thinking skills, as well as their ability to experiment and learn.
Still, most educators feel as if the use of AI in education is inevitable. In an informal Education Week LinkedIn poll with 700 votes, 87% of respondents said AI will affect the classroom, and 7% said it would not.
Educators shared more details about their opinions on AI’s impact in the comment section. Here are some of their responses, edited lightly for clarity.
Some educators fear AI will have a negative impact
It will be banned within three years once test scores plummet. It can’t be controlled, and 80% will use it to cheat.
It has negatively impacted the general public for sure. I hope it doesn’t enter the schools next.
Totally against it as an educator. If anything, I’m pulling BACK on technology in my classroom this year because it’s becoming more of a hindrance.
Other educators are embracing AI
I’m counting on it [having an impact]. And designing PD about exactly that.
Justin M.
Students are already using it, some to help them study and others to outright cheat. I’ve used it to help with planning and organizing ideas and even for inspiration sometimes. It’s here now and we can’t pretend that it isn’t, but we can show students how to use it in a productive way.
Emily H.
AI will shape classrooms in ways we can’t ignore. The opportunity? Freeing teachers from busywork so they can focus on relationships, creativity, and student growth. The challenge? Keeping humanity, critical thinking, and cultural awareness at the center.
Tricia T.
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