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Teachers, students test out AI in Colorado classrooms

Students and a teacher chat amongst each other in a classroom. They have open laptops in front of them.
Ann Schimke
/
Chalkbeat Colorado
Students in an after-school club called AI Studio at Aurora West College Preparatory Academy pitch products they conjured up with the help of AI at a meeting in late October 2024.

This story was by Chalkbeat. Sign up for their newsletters at

In Room 126 at Denver鈥檚 South High School, students in a Spanish language arts class got suggestions for improving their short essays from an artificial intelligence app called Magic School: 鈥淵ou could elaborate on your examples,鈥 the app advised one student.

Upstairs, in AP Computer Science, a student shared the fix she made after feeding the Java code she鈥檇 written for a bookstore inventory system into the same AI app.

Later that October day, students in an after-school club at Aurora West College Preparatory Academy pitched hypothetical products in presentations augmented with AI images and text.

For A鈥檓ariae, a ninth grader who envisioned a high-tech shoe that could be transformed from sandals to sneakers to boots with clip-on attachments, there was one problem. The trendy blue shoe the AI app had conjured on his laptop screen had a Nike swoosh on the side, a trademarked logo that would be off-limits for his brand.

These scenes illustrate how Colorado teachers and students are beginning to use artificial intelligence in the classroom 鈥 and navigate its limitations. Since ChatGPT burst onto the scene in late 2022, the use of generative AI in schools in the state and across the country has become increasingly common. New York City鈥檚 schools chief before he left the post in October, and districts in and are piloting AI tools.

Generative AI analyzes huge amounts of data to generate text, images, videos, and other kinds of content.

For the moment, many teachers, and students are approaching AI more as a toe-dipping exercise than a plunge into the deep end. Not only does it take time to test and learn the apps, they don鈥檛 always work as intended. In addition, some districts are still figuring out what guardrails need to be in place to protect student privacy.

Still, the sense of excitement about AI in education is real, with a flood of products on the market and a complementary stream of AI conferences, training, and webinars available to K-12 educators. Currently, eight districts in Colorado, ranging from Adams 12 to Estes Park to Durango, are participating in a yearlong project to build AI literacy offered through the Colorado Education Initiative, which has taken in ushering the state鈥檚 schools into the AI age.

Karen Quanbeck, vice president of statewide partnerships for the organization, ticked off some of the ways AI can help teachers: quickly adapting passages for students at different reading levels, providing personalized tutoring after school hours, and allowing students to have a conversation with a computer facsimile of a historical figure.

鈥淢y goodness, just the potential for what this could do, for closing learning gaps, for really helping us rethink how learning experiences look because the 鈥榮tand-and-deliver鈥 model is not always effective,鈥 said Quanback.

Jeff Buck, the AP Computer Science teacher at South and a 26-year veteran of Denver Public Schools, recently joined a different yearlong AI training program for educators. He鈥檚 also taking a series of AI trainings offered by his district.

鈥淭his is what keeps me going. I can learn something new and interesting, right? And kids are kind of interested, and so we鈥檙e learning together, and I think that鈥檚 really fun,鈥 he said.

But the learning curve, he said with a laugh, is 鈥渁lso a massive time sink.鈥

Once teachers master the apps, AI can be a time-saver, helping draft lesson plans and tests, taking a first pass at grading essays, or writing and translating parent newsletters. The cost of the apps varies, with basic versions often available for free.

Mois茅s S谩nchez Berm煤dez, the South High School teacher whose students used Magic School to get writing feedback, said he鈥檚 generally been impressed with app鈥檚 suggestions. Even its critiques of student poetry were decent.

鈥淚t was not 100% but it鈥檚 getting there,鈥 he said.

By using the app to give students 鈥 sometimes up to 35 in the classroom 鈥 immediate feedback on their first drafts, S谩nchez Berm煤dez has more time to work with students individually.

鈥淚t gives them meaningful work to do while I go one by one,鈥 he said.

But not everyone likes getting pointers from a chatbot.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 really like using AI for the feedback. I鈥檇 rather have a real person,鈥 said Juliana Gutierrez, a junior in Spanish Language Arts 3. 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 understand something, you can ask [the teacher] to explain it in another way, or in more of a personal way.鈥

One floor up, Buck recalled how he鈥檇 given his students the option to ask Magic School to review their Java code.

The response was 鈥渢epid,鈥 he said. 鈥淣ot everybody is necessarily seeing the value right now.鈥

While most students chose to ask Buck or classmates for feedback, a few students used Magic School. One of them was Mimi Genter, a senior who鈥檇 written code for organizing book store inventory.

The app returned a neatly organized list of the things she鈥檇 done correctly, signified by green checkmarks. It also flagged a typo in her code, suggested an additional feature she could add, and closed by saying, 鈥淜eep up the excellent work. You鈥檙e really grasping these object-oriented programming concepts.鈥

Genter said it was only the second time she鈥檇 used Magic School but appreciated that it was an efficient fine-tooth comb of sorts 鈥 instantly spotting a capital 鈥淟鈥 that should have been lower-case.

As educators incorporate AI tools into their lessons, many are looking not only to make lessons enriching, but to build students鈥 fluency in a technology that鈥檚 here to stay.

They want students to understand how to craft prompts that return worthwhile information, to use AI tools to deepen learning without crossing the line to cheating, and to recognize the inherent weaknesses of artificial intelligence.

Talley Nichols, who teaches high school history at Crested Butte Community School in western Colorado, sent out permission slips last spring asking parents if their children could use ChatGPT in class. She was pleasantly surprised by the response.

鈥淚 was worried about parental pushback, but I didn鈥檛 get any,鈥 she said. 鈥淚n fact, I got a couple of parents who were like, 鈥楾hank you for doing this. This is important. They need to learn how to use this.鈥欌

Nichols said her students like using AI to generate project or topic ideas: 鈥淚t鈥檚 really good at giving you lists of ideas, and then you can take that and run with it.鈥

But she鈥檚 proceeding with caution. When her students did research projects last spring on key figures from European cultural movements like the Renaissance, she had them print out the responses they got from ChatGPT, evaluate the quality of the responses, and then seek out other non-AI sources for further research. And when Nichols鈥 students turn in final essays or projects that incorporate AI, they have to turn in notes, rough drafts, and edits to prove they鈥檝e done the work every step of the way.

鈥淚f there鈥檚 something that they could just go home and create on ChatGPT, I don鈥檛 make that a homework assignment,鈥 said Nichols. 鈥淲e do that in class.鈥

Educators are also helping students think critically about the racial and gender bias inherent in AI.

Students in Aurora West College Preparatory Academy鈥檚 weekly after-school club, 鈥淎I Studio鈥 quickly discovered that predisposition as they experimented with AI this fall in preparation for their marketing presentations. When A鈥檓ariae asked the tool to produce images of doctors, it showed two older white men and one white woman. When he asked for an image of 鈥渢hree white teenagers,鈥 he got a picture of three happy white teenagers.

Next, he said, 鈥淚 searched three black teenagers and it showed, like a mug shot.鈥

Asked how to deal with racist and sexist results, one of the other three boys in the club said, 鈥淵ou have to train your AI.鈥

It鈥檚 exactly the message Antonio Vigil, Aurora鈥檚 director of innovative classroom technology and the club鈥檚 advisor, has been emphasizing all semester. He wants students to understand that they have to continually vet AI responses for accuracy, precision, and bias 鈥 and revise them accordingly.

He said, 鈥淵ou have to be the human in the loop.鈥

Ann Schimke is a reporter at Chalkbeat Colorado. Her work frequently appears on-air at 萝莉少女 91.5 FM and online at 萝莉少女.org. Contact Ann at aschimke@chalkbeat.org.