Your Teachers Are Already Using AI. You Just Don't Have a Policy for It Yet.
68% of teachers use AI weekly. Most without approval, privacy vetting, or any policy governing student data. Here's why that's a leadership gap — and how to close it.
Practical guidance on AI policy, student privacy, staff training, and responsible implementation — written by a K-8 Director of Technology who attends the same board meetings you do.
68% of teachers now use AI tools weekly. Most of them are doing it without district approval, without privacy vetting, and without any policy governing how student data is handled. That's not their fault. It's a leadership gap — and it's one that closes faster than you think.
Read the article →68% of teachers use AI weekly. Most without approval, privacy vetting, or any policy governing student data. Here's why that's a leadership gap — and how to close it.
Most schools start with tools. The ones that get this right start with governance. Five questions that reveal exactly where your school stands — and what to build next.
Ohio requires every public district to adopt an AI policy by July 1, 2026. Here's what the model policy requires and the fastest defensible path to compliance.
A principal who walks into a board meeting with a clear, defensible answer. A parent letter that builds trust. Here's the picture of what 90 days of doing this carefully produces.
Most schools approve AI tools based on a demo and a price. Here are the seven questions your privacy review needs to ask — and the answers that disqualify a tool immediately.
More school boards are adding AI governance to their meeting agendas in 2026. Here's exactly what they're asking — and how to walk in with answers rather than apologies.