No Fear, Teachers: Artificial Intelligence is the Assistant You’ve Always Wanted

By Founder Ted Kalomiris

The list of concerns teachers generally have when they hear “AI in the classroom” is rather long. At the top of the list is job security. The integration of artificial intelligence (AI) in education is a revolutionary step forward that offers numerous benefits for both educators and students. Instead of succumbing to that fear that The Jetsons planted in 1963, teachers might consider how AI is going to bring them more time, more control, and higher success rates in both student achievement and personal job satisfaction. As technology continues to shape the world, it has become imperative for teachers to embrace AI in the classroom. 

The list of benefits of incorporating AI in the classroom goes on and on. Some that you may not have considered include the following: 

Personalized Learning

One of the most significant benefits of using AI in the classroom is its ability to provide personalized learning experiences. AI can analyze individual student’s progress, strengths, and weaknesses, and tailor instruction to meet their specific needs. This ensures that students receive the support and challenge they require, maximizing their learning outcomes.

Personalized learning is a pivotal benefit of embracing AI in the classroom. AI-driven systems have the remarkable ability to analyze individual students’ progress and learning styles, adapting instruction to cater to their specific needs. This tailoring of educational content ensures that no student is left behind and that every student can progress at their own pace. Moreover, it enables educators to identify struggling students early and provide timely interventions, ultimately leading to improved academic outcomes.

Personalized learning not only caters to students’ academic needs but also addresses their individual interests, making the educational experience more engaging and relevant. This approach fosters a deeper understanding of the subject matter and kindles a genuine enthusiasm for learning. By customizing the learning experience, AI empowers students to take ownership of their education, enhancing their overall academic success and long-term educational outcomes.

Time and Resource Efficiency

Automated grading and administrative tasks can save teachers valuable time. AI can handle routine assessments, leaving teachers with more time to focus on planning engaging lessons, offering individualized support, and fostering meaningful interactions with students.

Time and resource efficiency is a paramount benefit of embracing AI in the classroom. By automating routine tasks such as grading, administrative work, and data analysis, AI liberates teachers from time-consuming chores. This newfound time can be redirected towards creating 

innovative lesson plans, offering personalized support, and building stronger relationships with students. Additionally, AI-driven systems reduce the need for excessive physical resources, like printed materials, which not only saves money but also promotes environmental sustainability. Consequently, educators can channel their energy into more impactful teaching, ensuring that every moment in the classroom is maximally productive and focused on student learning.

Scalability

AI can help address the issue of teacher shortages by providing supplementary support and resources, enabling more students to access high-quality education.

AI-powered educational tools and platforms can accommodate a wide range of student needs and numbers. These technologies can be easily scaled up to handle larger class sizes or adapt to the unique learning requirements of individual students. Whether in a traditional classroom or remote learning environment, AI can provide consistent and adaptable support, making it a valuable resource for both teachers and students. As student populations evolve and educational needs change, AI can effortlessly adjust to meet these demands. This scalability not only improves the efficiency of teaching but also ensures that quality education remains accessible and flexible, catering to diverse educational settings and requirements, ultimately benefiting educators, students, and educational institutions alike.

While AI offers numerous benefits, it’s essential to implement these technologies thoughtfully and ethically. Teachers should work alongside AI systems, using their expertise to guide and interpret the data and to ensure that technology serves the best interests of the students and the broader educational community.

The benefits of incorporating artificial intelligence in the classroom are profound. From personalized learning to scalability, AI holds great potential to transform education. As educators embrace AI, they stand to gain more efficient, effective, and fulfilling teaching experiences. Moreover, students will benefit from a more engaging and inclusive learning environment. The key is to strike a balance, using AI as a supportive tool that complements, rather than replaces, the vital role of human educators. By harnessing the power of AI in education, we can take a significant step towards preparing the next generation for success in an increasingly technology-driven world.

From one founder to another, 

Ted

Just Say NO to the Spray and Pray Method of Selling

When I was in high school, speech club and theater were my extracurricular passions and a critical distraction from all the pains of my high school years. Lessons learned in these spaces were incredibly helpful to me later in life and in my career.

Mr. Kimball, my speech and theater teacher, taught key lessons of active listening as a means to get the audience invested into my often warbled message. Mr. Kimball’s “Diction! Diction! Diction!” still reverberates through my mind as I speak, even today. 

This period of time was when I started to think about listening as the most powerful form of communication in my selling process. However, even as I still maintain this value, I am often tempted to fall into the trap of Spray and Pray Selling, where I need to get the same message out to as many people as possible. For sales leaders, the need to track metrics around the number of touches seems common. Frankly, I do not know what anyone ever saw from encouraging voluminous calls and emails as a method for measuring sales performance. The best business development representative I ever knew would consistently set the most appointments but would have the lowest call numbers. Perhaps it’s just harder to measure quality over quantity, which is no excuse for failing to try.

Rather than attempting to Spray and Pray, consider the following: 

  1. Network

With the advent of technologies like hi5, we can start to prospect more efficiently and successfully. In fact, networking is the fastest way to grow a meaningful pipeline, designed to convert more deals and reinforce your word of mouth branding (your personal brand especially) much more effectively. By increasing relationships within your intended field of business, you will be able to capture the attention of those who are eager and ready to work with you rather than falling in the background as noise.

  1. Attend Conferences

Getting in front of your target audience sometimes requires stepping outside of your comfortable WFH environment and making some moves. By attending conferences where high impact stakeholders will be, you are more likely to grow relationships that will be mutually beneficial. By being intentional about which conferences you plan to attend, you will be able to better leverage this time to grow connections and make new contacts. To find a list of possible conferences within EdTech, follow EdSurge and make plans to attend. 

  1. Deliver Content that is Valuable to Prospective Clients

Lastly, think about the ways you engage and deliver information that adds value to your prospective clients. When I started this From One Founder to Another series, I was eager to offer information that would give peers and those coming into the field insight on how to build a successful business. I was also interested in further developing my personal list of contacts through lead generation. After six months of these bi-monthly articles, I have heard great feedback from colleagues as well as prospects that it “is encouraging to know that someone gets it.” By adding value, you capture a more sincere audience and can focus on building what you do best. 

In the EdTech sector, where the needs and challenges of educational institutions vary widely, a personalized and relationship-based approach is often the most effective way to prospect for new clients. Networking allows you to understand, address, and adapt to the specific needs of educators and institutions, ultimately increasing your chances of success in this competitive industry.

From one founder to another,
Ted

Retention is Public School’s Top Priority

One of the lessons I learned from an important sales leader early in my career was that retaining a client is a much easier task than gaining a new one. It was my responsibility to find new clients and then keep them satisfied enough to keep my net-new pipeline producing positive revenue results.  

Watching school districts continuously struggle with this nationwide problem of teacher shortages isn’t hard to understand on the surface. Teachers have been underpaid, overworked, and ultimately responsible for doing the work some parents should be doing. This has simply been accepted in our society…until now.

Now, we watch as school districts are paying out incentivizing (but dangerous) signing bonuses to attract talented and qualified teachers into their ranks. We are watching the growth of technology offer live classroom instruction by virtual teachers. In addition, many district leaders are heading for greener pastures or retiring outright. While education is no stranger to innovating through challenges with patience and grace, this time around we have not a singular crisis, but one with a myriad of distractions for district administrators. Community infighting, continuous struggles in the classroom, and an ongoing recovery from COVID (not to mention new threats of school closures) have landed squarely on the education professional’s desk with no time to spare to solve the problems. 

Some solutions for retaining talent and rebuilding public school systems include: 

Professional Development

For decades, a professional career as a teacher has been seen as an admirable professional path for women and men alike. According to the National Center of Educational Statistics, public school teachers have a higher educational attainment in 2022-21 than a decade earlier in 2011-12. Specifically, 51% of school teachers hold a master’s degree as their highest degree. To continue to engage and retain teachers, it is critical to invest in ongoing professional development opportunities to help them grow in their careers. 

Another possibility is providing mentorship programs for new teachers to ease their transition into the profession and grow their capabilities as a professional. Entering a career in any field is difficult. However, pairing tenured teachers with incoming teachers helps to ease the adjustment period and ensure that new teachers stay involved and optimistic about their future.

Diversity and Inclusion

Creating a classroom of today requires intentionality and strategic leadership from the top. Research by the Learning Policy Institute revealed that all students benefit from 

having teachers of color. When taught by teachers of color, students of color have better academic performance, improved graduation rates, and are more likely to attend college.

EdWeek shared that in the 2015-16 school year, over 80 percent of teachers were white and less than 7 percent were Black, according to federal data. Meanwhile, the white student population has steadily declined since 2000—from 61 percent to 44 percent in 2017—while the Hispanic student population rose by 50 percent since 1997 and the Asian student population by 46 percent. Black students comprise about 15 percent of all K-12 students—although they increasingly attend schools with at least 75 percent non-white enrollment, as do Hispanic and American Indian students: 58, 60, and 30 percent, respectively, according to the National Center for Education Statistics.”


Growing efforts to attract and retain teachers with an emphasis on diversity and inclusion are linked to positive academic, social-emotional, and behavioral student outcomes. These results are partly driven by mindsets and practices aligned to “culturally responsive teaching.”

Competitive Compensation

Money, money, money! We’ve heard it said before that teachers do not enter the field to make a lot of money. However, we have taken one’s personal calling to teach as a way to cut costs and pay educators the bare minimum. Gone are the days where we – as a body of educators, administrators, and education consultants – will ignore the fact that educators should be making more than a living wage. Policy changes, federal investments, and COVID relief monies have sweetened the deal to better compensate teachers for their time, expertise, and work as an educator. 

If you want to attract and retain teachers, competitive compensation is low hanging fruit in the realm of establishing a solid core of educators. By offering competitive salaries and benefits packages to attract and retain high-quality teachers, you will prevent turnover amongst your staff and ensure a more stable school environment. 

Overcoming the teacher retention crisis is a long-term goal that requires continuous commitment and evolution from districts, policymakers, and the greater community. By tailoring strategies to the specific needs and challenges of one’s district, you will increase the opportunity for success. Afterall, education is not “one-size fits all.”.  

From one founder to another, 

Ted

A 2023-24 School Year Message to K-12 Leadership Teams

As K-12 leadership teams embark on the 2023-’24 school year, the lessons of the past resonate powerfully. The post-COVID era is one of transformation and resilience, where challenges are met with innovation, compassion, and a steadfast commitment to educational excellence.

Across the country, school districts are seeing a sweeping decline in teachers, staff, and even bus drivers. As district leadership teams wrestle with current challenges, Ed Tech consultants have an opportunity to play a role in addressing these challenges and taking our public school systems to the next level.

Funding is Not Forever

In a recent special report, EdWeek Market Brief examines where “districts are likely to increase or cut spending in fiscal 2023-24 across an array of areas that include core and supplemental curriculum, social-emotional learning, devices, assessment, data platforms, internet connectivity, and more.” In a post-COVID era, funding resources are coming to an end for special programming and curriculum meant to give students a boost following the stall in learning due to the pandemic. 

While we are now in August, most districts begin getting serious about their annual budget plans in mid-July prior to welcoming students back for the academic year. NOW is the time of year for everything Back to School. This season includes everything from welcoming students and their families back to a more structured pace, new wardrobe expenses, and the sprint to staff classrooms with enough teachers to ensure class continues. 
 
The time is now. Education companies must lean into conversations with administrators while understanding the many complex challenges facing educators across the board. While many teachers have been away for the summer, administrators never really left. They have attended conferences, planning sessions, and they have made plans for rolling out new budgets that support finding talented educators and support staff to deliver the quality of education parents and guardians are expecting for their children. 

Itemize Budget Priorities

The ability to source and retain talent is at or near the top of the list for every school district. It is advantageous to survey district administrators on what they regard as their biggest professional challenges, in everything from teacher recruitment to improving school climate to using technology effectively. While K-12 recruiters are doing an incredible job of sourcing talent, it’s the ability to find new sources that plagues districts the most. 

This is why firms like Leap are developing new options for school districts. 

“As we collaborate with school districts throughout the nation to address staffing vacancies, we gain firsthand insight into the challenges confronting our education system,” said Gary Kagan, Co-Founder of Leap. “Finding the right candidates means we’ve got to get creative and stay flexible, thinking outside the box to make things work.”

Adding more resources to the effort of finding qualified educators and staff is critical right now, especially when budgets are limited and COVID-era funding is coming to an end.

We All Have a Role to Play

We all have a role to play in ensuring that our children return to a safe, productive, and supportive classroom. Thank you, teachers, for all you are going to do this year on behalf of families. And welcome back, administrators! The work you are doing is extremely critical, and while so many are choosing to leave your ranks, we owe you a debt of gratitude as you continue to deliver on an increasingly difficult promise to keep.

From one founder to another, 

Ted