Skip to main content

Lincoln Elementary

School, Family, Community!

Building AI Literacy in our Classrooms

Posted Date: 03/31/26 (08:23 AM)


Teaching and Learning Newsletter

Teaching & Learning

EdTech Edition

March 31, 2026
Google Classroom LMS

Building AI Literacy in Our Classrooms

 

What is changing in education

AI is quickly becoming part of everyday learning. Many students are already using AI tools to support schoolwork, and employers increasingly expect graduates to have basic AI literacy skills.

In conversations across education, the focus is shifting. Rather than trying to detect AI use, schools are working to help students learn how to use AI responsibly.

AI detectors simply do not work the way people think they do. These tools try to predict whether writing was generated by AI by analyzing patterns in the text, but they cannot reliably determine authorship. They can incorrectly flag human writing as AI-generated while also missing writing created with AI. These false positives have created stress for some students who worry their original work could be misidentified.

At the same time, many students report that AI helps them understand difficult concepts, start assignments, and check their thinking. Yet many hesitate to share when they use AI because they worry teachers will assume they are cheating.

Many schools are moving away from AI detection and toward learning environments where students can use AI safely while teachers can see how it supports their thinking and learning. AI can meet students where they are and provide support in the moment they need it, helping explain concepts, prompt deeper thinking, and spark curiosity. At the same time, it gives teachers insight into the learning process by making student thinking more visible. Instead of only grading the final product, educators can now see how students worked through ideas, questions, and revisions along the way. This shift helps create classrooms where students have greater agency in their learning while teachers guide and support the process.

Why this matters for Ellensburg

This work connects directly to our Portrait of a Graduate. We want students to leave our schools as critical thinkers, problem solvers, and responsible digital citizens who are prepared for the world they are entering.

Our role as educators is not simply to respond to new technology, but to help students learn how to think, question, and make responsible decisions when using tools like AI.

When teachers understand how AI can support learning, they are better able to guide students in using these tools thoughtfully, ethically, and productively.

For this reason, building AI literacy for both teachers and students is an important next step in preparing our students for future learning and careers.



 
Updated Notebooklm

NotebookLM: An AI Tool for Teaching and Learning

Google’s NotebookLM is an AI learning tool that integrates with Google Workspace and can be accessed by teachers and students within their Google environment. It allows users to upload sources such as Google Docs, PDFs, slides, or notes and then interact with those materials through AI to summarize, explain concepts, generate study guides, and ask questions.

For teachers, NotebookLM can help organize instructional materials, generate summaries of readings, create discussion questions, and develop study resources for students. For students, it acts as a learning assistant that can explain difficult concepts, help break down complex texts, and support review and study.

NotebookLM can also be particularly helpful for neurodivergent learners. The tool can summarize long passages, organize information into key ideas, generate study guides or flashcards, and present information in multiple formats. These features can support students who benefit from chunked information, repetition, and alternative ways of processing content.

Because NotebookLM works directly with the sources that teachers provide, it helps students stay grounded in the learning materials while using AI to explore ideas, ask questions, and deepen their understanding.

  • Slide editing and revision You can now revise or regenerate slides directly inside NotebookLM. This makes it easier to quickly create or improve presentations using your sources.

  • New visual summary styles NotebookLM can now create different infographic styles to visually summarize content from your sources.

  • Improved flashcards and quizzes –Progress now saves across sessions, and users can mark cards as “got it” or “missed it” for easier review and studying.

  • Cinematic Video Overviews NotebookLM can now turn your research or uploaded sources into short cinematic explainer videos. The AI analyzes your documents and generates narration and visuals to explain the key ideas in a more engaging way.
 

SchoolAI: Supporting AI Literacy for Teachers and Students

As we continue using SchoolAI next year, it is helpful to remember why this tool is part of our district’s AI learning journey.

SchoolAI provides an easy and safe entry point for teachers to begin exploring AI in a classroom-friendly environment. The platform is designed specifically for schools, which means teachers can experiment with AI tools while maintaining visibility into how students are interacting with the system.

For students, SchoolAI provides a structured way to receive support and feedback while learning how to use AI responsibly. Instead of simply asking a general AI chatbot for answers, students work within guided learning spaces where AI helps prompt thinking, ask questions, and support the learning process.

This allows teachers to see student responses in real time and better understand where students may need clarification or additional support.

SchoolAI works help both teachers and students develop the AI literacy skills needed for future learning and careers, including how to use AI thoughtfully, ethically, and safely.
To better understand two key parts of the platform, you can review this quick guide:

 

Let’s Connect!

Have questions or need support with EdTech?
I’m here to help! Feel free to reach out.

Joell Boast
EdTech Coordinator
Ellensburg School District

📧 Email: joell.boast@esd401.org
📞 Phone: 509-925-8300, ext. 31107
📍 Office Location: EHS Library