Claims
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Industry signals are shifting from AI-tool proficiency toward durable human skills
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Screen restrictions need pedagogical infrastructure, not just limits
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Schools need separate frameworks for AI ethics and mature AI use
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Rushed school AI plans can worsen wellbeing and equity risks
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Adult AI productivity gains do not automatically justify the same use for students
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AI can reshape a student’s purpose, but it should not replace it
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Take-home essays are no longer reliable evidence by themselves
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AI tool choices should be judged against stated learning values
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AI implementation needs a reason to believe change is possible
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AI changes how people come to know things, not just how fast they work
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AI literacy only works when it is connected to subject-area knowledge
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AI literacy should teach students what to do with AI, not just what to think about it
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AI tools should be tested on the real tasks they will be used for
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AI-built models can help students show conceptual understanding
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In an AI world, assessment should focus on watching students think
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Students need boundaries for when to use AI and when to step back
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Treating AI like a person can help if students know the limits
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Subject-specific AI literacy frameworks are useful maps, not final answers
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New AI capabilities will often reach schools through existing tools
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Prompting AI is a literacy practice, not just a technical trick
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District AI implementation needs living guidance and teacher-led redesign
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Human-authored literature gives students a real other person to encounter
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Learning requires some productive struggle that AI can remove
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Treating normal AI use as pathology can lead to worse school policy
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Voice AI supports speech, translation, transcription, and accessibility use cases
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Research prompts can support inquiry without taking over student judgment
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Schools need a mix of structured and open-ended AI experiences
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AI can undermine learning when students use it without guidance
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Vibe coding is an early sign of broader knowledge-work change
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AI-generated text can make finished writing less trustworthy as evidence
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AI grading systems need transparency, validation, and bias checks
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Teen AI use is already normal enough for schools to plan around it
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Prompt-and-rubric writing is especially vulnerable to AI shortcuts
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Agentic AI can preserve thinking when students have to design the work