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Archive for August, 2025

I recently gave a virtual talk on AI in schools which forced me to solidify my current thinking and I tried to make some direct linkages to the Culture of Yes belief. I have included the video at the bottom, and this post is an adaption of the talk:

This summer, AI in education has gone from a quiet undercurrent to a headline wave. Major corporations have announced new AI powered tools for classrooms. Governments, particularly in the United States, have released statements, strategies, and funding commitments to “prepare schools for the AI era.” There is a growing sense, both excitement and urgency, that this technology will profoundly reshape learning.

As we head into the fall, the question for me is not whether AI will change education. It already has. The real question is: Will we guide this change with wisdom, or will it guide us?

Where We Are:

We are in a moment of intense attention and investment. For the first time in history, students have instant access to a form of intelligence that can write, create, and problem solve alongside them. The conversation has shifted from “Should AI be in schools?” to “How do we use it well?”

The opportunities are extraordinary, and so are the risks. In our rush to adopt tools, we can easily mistake activity for progress. AI is not a magic box. It reflects the data and the biases we feed it. Without careful integration, we risk amplifying inequities instead of closing them.

At the same time, teachers are navigating new pressures: learning unfamiliar tools while managing existing workloads, and working with students who arrive with vastly different levels of AI experience and access.

What I Hope:

In West Vancouver, our innovation priorities are as bold as they are deliberate: AI and physical literacy. Together, they reflect our belief that the future belongs to students who are digitally fluent, physically confident and deeply human.

My hope for AI is that it:

Amplifies human wisdom rather than replacing human intelligence.

Delivers personalized learning that has long been promised but rarely achieved.

Serves as a force for equity, not by assuming all students need the same thing, but by providing each student with the individualized support they need, regardless of their school’s resources or their family’s circumstances.

Frees up teachers’ time for what matters most: relationships, mentorship and inspiration.

In a Culture of Yes, we approach these possibilities with openness while remaining thoughtful about implementation.

What We Need to Do:

Focus on the Shift: From Memory to Meaning

For over a century, schools rewarded students who could store and retrieve information. AI changes that rote memorization game. We must now prioritize what students do with the knowledge — how they apply it, question it, and create from it.

Equip Students as Creators, Not Just Consumers

In a Culture of Yes, we say yes to new possibilities while maintaining academic integrity. AI becomes a collaborator for composing music, designing solutions to local challenges and exploring ethical dilemmas we have never faced before, not a replacement for student thinking.
Imagine a Grade 9 student co writing a play with AI, then performing it with peers, learning as much about collaboration and creativity as they do about technology.

Develop New Literacies

AI literacy is more than knowing how to use a tool. It is the ability to:

Prompt effectively and creatively.

Evaluate outputs for accuracy and bias.

Reflect on whether AI use aligns with human goals and values, and recognize when not to use it.

Understand the difference between AI assistance and AI dependence.

Lead Through Diffusion, Not Mandate

A Culture of Yes means saying yes to teacher curiosity and experimentation. The best AI integration spreads from teacher to teacher, classroom to classroom, through shared practice and professional learning, not top down directives that ignore classroom realities.  When your colleague in the classroom next to you has something exciting to share, you are keen to listen to them. 

Keep Humanity at the Core

AI can provide information, but only people provide inspiration. AI can offer feedback, but only people offer hope. We must ensure that every learning experience remains fundamentally about human connection and growth.

Looking Ahead

The age of AI is not coming, it is here. As educators, leaders, and communities, we face a choice that will shape the next generation’s relationship with both technology and learning itself.

A Culture of Yes means we choose:

Curiosity over fear

Collaboration over competition

Wisdom over efficiency

Human potential over technological convenience

If we embrace this approach, saying yes to AI’s possibilities while saying yes to our students’ humanity, we will not just reimagine learning. We will create classrooms where technology serves human flourishing, where every student can thrive, and where the future we are building together reflects our highest aspirations for education.

The conversation about AI in education is just beginning. As we step into this new school year, I invite you to share your hopes, your experiments, and your questions. We learn best when we learn together.

 

Various AI tools were used as feedback helpers (for our students this post would be a Yellow assignment – see link to explanation chart) as I edited and refined my thinking.

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August 3rd was a day layered with meaning. It marked the final stop of Paul Simon’s A Quiet Celebration tour, my 25th wedding anniversary, and the 11th anniversary of my dad’s passing. My wife and I sat together in the audience. She has indulged my obsession and traveled with me to Seattle, Las Vegas, Billings and Missoula, San Francisco, Toronto, and New York for various shows over the years, supporting a passion that is mine more than hers. It was my 17th Paul Simon concert overall and the fourth time on this tour alone.

Paul Simon has been the soundtrack to my life for more than 40 years. My parents were both teachers. My mom was a music teacher, and my dad produced school musicals, so music and performance were woven into our family life. We had a huge record collection at home, filling our house with sounds from many artists and eras. But Paul Simon’s songs always held a special place, becoming the constant companion through decades of change, growth, loss, and celebration.

A week before that final concert on this tour, I had seen Paul perform in Vancouver with my mom, who is now 84, along with my wife and older daughter. Sharing that evening with three generations of my family brought the music full circle, deepening the connections between past and present, memory and hope.

Since my dad passed in 2014, I have seen Paul Simon 14 times. That is not a coincidence. These concerts have become a kind of ritual, a way to stay close to something I shared deeply with my dad. Each performance feels like a thread that ties me back to the past,  to our shared love of music, to those early records spinning in the house, to the soundtracks that shaped who we were. And each time, I have wondered if this might be the last. Then I have felt the unexpected joy when another tour is announced. At 83, Paul seems to be having his own trouble retiring, and I am grateful for it. These concerts are unexpected gifts. They are reminders that we never know which moments with those we admire  will be the last, making each encounter more precious.

It is remarkable how music can become a bridge across loss, time, and change. It is a thread that ties us to memory and family. When my dad was battling cancer, he often listened to Graceland, an album that has been my personal favorite for as long as I can remember. The rhythms, stories, and melodies from that album (controversial at the time) are more than songs. They are stories of connection between people, places, and generations.

Further back in his catalogue, there is a line from The Boxer that feels especially powerful given the state of our world. “A fighter still remains.” On this tour, Paul seemed to linger on the line a little longer. It landed differently. Music, like the best education, does not just entertain or inform. It becomes internalized. It becomes part of how we navigate life’s challenges. Just as Paul’s voice has accompanied me through different seasons of my life, the most meaningful teachers become part of their students’ internal soundtracks. Their encouragement, wisdom, and belief echo through students’ lives long after the classroom doors close, surfacing in moments of difficulty, discovery, and growth.

This connection between music and learning runs deep. Both great songs and great teaching become woven into who we are. They are not just external experiences but transform into internal resources we carry forward. A student might hear their teacher’s voice years later when tackling a difficult problem, just as I hear Paul’s melodies during life’s most significant moments.

I am grateful to my parents who taught me that education and music are both ways to connect deeply with the world and with each other. Seeing Paul Simon live again, with my wife on our anniversary, and earlier with my mom and daughter, felt like a celebration of those enduring connections. It was a reminder that the past lives on when we share stories and songs together.

We all have soundtracks to our lives. These voices and melodies accompany us through our stories. Music, like education, reminds us that what truly endures are the connections we make. To family. To history. To each other. And to the dreams and struggles that make us human.

So here is to Paul Simon, whose music continues to remind us that even when we are battered and worn, a fighter still remains. And here is to all the teachers and artists who become part of our soundtracks, helping us keep fighting, keep growing, and keep connecting, no matter what the world brings our way.

The image at the top of this post was generated through AI.  Various AI tools were used as feedback helpers (for our students this post would be a Yellow assignment – see link to explanation chart) as I edited and refined my thinking.

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