Why Educators Must Become AI Literate, And How to Start — from edmentum.com by Priten Soundar-Shah
Much of our focus these few years has been spent helping students learn how to use AI responsibly, especially to combat cheating and plagiarism, and also with consideration given to productive learning, critical thinking, and online safety. But we are still behind on building fundamental literacy for teachers. Recent data supports this literacy gap. For example, Microsoft Education found that 80% of teachers say they are using AI, but 60% have received no or little training. We cannot continue to expect teachers to build student AI literacy without defining what success looks like for educator literacy, and there we’re falling short.
In some instances, AI literacy in the classroom is being defined as the ability to use chat tools to produce some sort of outcome. By that standard, we’re doing much better than we were three years ago. Students and teachers are increasingly turning to AI tools to produce study aids, outlines, drafts, and other content. And, some schools do provide training that is often concentrated on a particular vendor’s tool and how to use it effectively in the classroom.
However, we are leaving out the training that is necessary to help educators learn how to decide when to use or not use the technology and what the implications of that are. For example, I’ve spoken to teachers who have access to a variety of AI tools, have received training on how to use them, but still don’t incorporate them into their workflow, because they don’t know if it’s “right.”




