By this logic I assume you are also vaping with students since they are doing it anyway? |
Honey, bless your heart. It’s 2025, not 1985. Why the HELL would we want textbooks? Seriously, were you born stupid or dropped on your head as a baby? What explains your foolishness? |
| I have yet to hear anyone provide evidence that AI tools for teachers produce results better than, or even as good as, traditional tools. So we’re going to use it just because it’s there I guess. And just finish off killing the the environment too. Do people even understand how much energy AI consumes??? Are we giving up on stopping climate change just so we can play with this toy the broligarchs made?? |
Thank you. I think most parents would love for the majority of teachers to take this path. |
Countless articles about European countries moving back to textbooks and NO online/no computers/no screens and already seeing positive results for children and their learning. FCPS- let’s not only do all online, but double-down with AI! |
+1. OpenAI is not trustworthy. Should have signed up with Khan Academy if they wanted AI. Very poor decision making. |
Well, at least we can finally eliminate the central office curriculum jobs now. I expect to see drastic cuts to central office budgets. |
| Can parents and community protest this? Do we get any say at all? Make big loud noise get the news involved. It’s the only way. |
How are you defining results? Student learning outcomes? Teacher productivity? Or what? If AI can be used to streamline certain tasks, like it's being used in many many other fields, it could free up their time to do more important things. |
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I have serious concerns about FCPS piloting AI tools with teachers—and indirectly with students—without fully acknowledging the well-documented harms of excessive technology exposure in childhood. We must talk honestly about the risks of AI and digital tools for developing minds.
Over the last decade, we’ve seen overwhelming research showing that early, frequent, and unstructured use of technology in school (especially in grades K–6) has contributed to a decline in attention, reduction in deep reading ability, and increased distraction in the classroom. Students are spending more time on screens than ever before, and academic outcomes and cognitive stamina have suffered. At the same time, the rise of smartphones and social media has fueled an unprecedented mental health crisis among adolescents. These platforms are intentionally engineered to be addictive, exploit vulnerabilities in the developing brain, and maximize engagement at the expense of well-being. Major tech companies are well aware of these harms, have been investigated for concealing internal data, and have repeatedly failed to make meaningful changes. We cannot ignore that this generation is experiencing higher rates of anxiety, depression, loneliness, sleep deprivation, and social withdrawal than any before it—and the timeline aligns directly with the widespread adoption of smartphones and social media. Families, researchers, and youth advocates have been sounding the alarm for years. Yes—technology and AI can offer tremendous value when used thoughtfully. But when implemented without strict guardrails, especially with children, these tools can be harmful. It is irresponsible to introduce emerging AI systems into classrooms without transparent safeguards, strong boundaries, and a full understanding of the risks. It is deeply concerning that FCPS would choose to make our children and teachers the test subjects for shaping the use of AI in education. Efficiency is not a good enough reason to gamble with student well-being, cognitive development, or mental health. Parents need to wake up to the fact that the school environment has become saturated with screens, and that more technology is not always better—especially for young children. We need intentional, developmentally safe, ethical, and transparent technology practices in schools. We need evidence-based decision-making. And we need to prioritize children over corporate partnerships. For anyone wanting to understand the real harms and research behind this crisis, I strongly recommend these resources: https://www.dmvunplugged.org/ https://www.instagram.com/jonathanhaidt/ https://www.instagram.com/scrolling2death/ |
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https://alpha.school/
This is a school model that is AI driven and the teachers are AI guides. |
It's grading their essays. It's providing commentary, suggestions, assigning a letter grade. Teachers just have to click "accept grade" or they can modify it before accepting. My child has written numerous 5 paragraph essays in 6th grade and they only feedback he's gotten has been AI generated commentary. The classroom teacher confirmed it at parent conferences--how so much time was saved since he doesn't have to grade essays anymore, just answer student questions about the feedback AI generated. |
To clarify, this is built in benchmark functionality that elementary school teachers are being encouraged to use. |
This was written by AI |
Exactly, where are the studies that STMath is better at teaching math, that Myon is better than reading, etc where are the studies that tests predict outcome? How good is benchmark? They constantly adopt more and more technology without any kind of evidence that it leads to better education. |