From the University of Houston to Rice, professors are writing their own rules for artificial intelligence in the classroom. Some embrace it as a learning tool; others ban it outright.
When Natasha Smith’s 11-year-old son sat down to email his teacher, she was shocked to read what he had sent. The 40-year-old mom from Washington state was helping her sixth grader with homework when ...
Pangram reports students are using AI to complete assignments while developing strategies to avoid detection, including ...
When Connor Fitzgerald sits down to create a lesson plan for his high school English class, he goes about it a little ...
This year, Stanford University organized Agents4Science , the first open conference to accept papers written entirely by ...
From homework to emotional advice, teens are turning to AI instead of each other — and it’s eroding real learning and ...
Districts across the country are creating new leadership roles, identifying best practices, and writing flexible policies to ...
These teacher-tested activities use free or familiar tools to help students think critically, create meaningfully, and ...
Battlefield 6 players are expressing frustration over a recently discovered restriction made worse during the current double ...
As handwriting fades in the digital age, experts warn that the loss of penmanship is also eroding memory, creativity, and ...
By automating tasks like lesson planning, grading and progress tracking, classrooms in North Dakota are freeing up instructor ...