Latest news with #digitalLiteracy

RNZ News
09-07-2025
- Health
- RNZ News
Nearly half of older NZers write passwords on paper: Research
technology life and society 35 minutes ago New data shows half of older New Zealanders still write their passwords on paper. The research also shows nearly a fifth of New Zealanders with older relatives say they'd rather go to the dentist than help their family members navigate the internet. Avast Director of Offensive Security Stephen Kho spoke to Ingrid Hipkiss.


Forbes
08-07-2025
- Forbes
The AI Skills Gap In Teaching: How Educators Can Catch Up
AI can help teachers and students Students are racing ahead with artificial intelligence while their teachers struggle to keep pace. Recent data confirms this trend. According to Statista, 63% of U.S. teens use AI tools like ChatGPT for school assignments, while only 30% of teachers report feeling confident with these same tools. This mismatch creates real problems: students may misuse AI while teachers struggle to provide meaningful guidance. The solution isn't banning AI or hoping it disappears. Teachers need practical skills to utilize these tools effectively and guide students toward ethical and productive AI use. The Problem: What The AI Skills Gap Looks Like The AI skills gap manifests differently across classrooms, but common patterns emerge that create real challenges for both teachers and students. Detection Focus Over Education. Teachers often confuse AI detection with AI education. Many educators focus on catching students who use AI rather than teaching them to use it well. This approach misses the opportunity to develop critical digital literacy skills. Policy Confusion Creates Chaos. One teacher allows AI-assisted brainstorming, while another prohibits the use of AI altogether. Students navigate these mixed messages without clear guidance about appropriate AI applications. Training Lags Behind Adoption. Districts invest in AI tools but provide minimal training. Teachers receive new platforms without the support needed to implement them effectively. Why This Matters: The AI Stakes For Students And Teachers Effective AI education requires teacher leadership. Students need adults who understand both the capabilities and limitations of AI. When teachers lack AI literacy, they are unable to help students navigate ethical considerations or develop critical thinking about AI outputs. Consider the entrepreneurship program I run, WIT—Whatever It Takes. We created an AI platform called WITY that our teens can use to support their entrepreneurial journey. Our teenage entrepreneurs are increasingly utilizing AI for business planning, market research, and content creation. They work with AI-literate mentors to learn to verify information, understand biases, and combine AI insights with human judgment. Students without this guidance often accept AI outputs uncritically. The same principle applies in traditional classrooms. Teachers who understand AI can help students use it as a learning tool rather than a replacement for thinking. They can design assessments that encourage AI collaboration while testing genuine understanding. This matters beyond academic success. Research from the World Economic Forum indicates that AI literacy will be essential for most careers by 2030. Students need early exposure to AI tools combined with education about their appropriate use. The Solution: Five Essential AI Skills For Teachers Based on my work with educators and young entrepreneurs, teachers need specific competencies to guide students effectively: 1. Prompt Engineering Fundamentals: Teachers should understand how to craft clear, specific requests that produce useful AI outputs. This skill enables them to utilize AI effectively and teach students to do the same. 2. Bias Recognition and Critical Evaluation: All AI systems reflect the biases present in their training data. Teachers need to spot these limitations and help students develop healthy skepticism about AI responses. 3. Tool Selection and Evaluation: With hundreds of AI tools available, teachers must learn to identify which ones are appropriate for educational use, considering factors such as age appropriateness, privacy policies, and educational value. 4. Creative Curriculum Integration: AI works best when integrated thoughtfully into the existing curriculum, rather than being treated as a separate subject. Teachers can use AI to generate discussion prompts, create differentiated materials, or provide personalized feedback. 5. Assessment Adaptation: As AI capabilities continue to expand, traditional testing methods become increasingly less effective. Teachers need strategies for assessing student learning in an AI-enhanced environment, focusing on application, analysis, and original thinking rather than merely recalling information. Getting Started: Practical AI Steps Teachers Can Take Today Teachers don't need extensive technical training to begin developing AI literacy. Small, consistent steps build confidence and competence over time. Start With Personal Experimentation. Teachers can use ChatGPT to brainstorm lesson ideas, create quiz questions, or generate examples for complex concepts. This hands-on experience fosters familiarity without the pressure of a classroom setting. Join Educator AI Communities. Online groups, such as the Facebook AI for Education community or Twitter hashtags like #AIinEd, provide practical tips and real-world classroom examples. These communities offer peer support and shared learning opportunities. Focus On One Tool At A Time. Rather than trying to master multiple AI platforms, teachers can start with one tool and thoroughly explore its capabilities. This builds confidence and provides a foundation for learning additional tools. Document What Works. Teachers should keep simple notes about successful AI applications and share them with colleagues. This creates institutional knowledge and encourages broader adoption. Building AI Support: What Schools And Districts Can Do Individual teacher initiative matters, but systemic support accelerates progress. School and district leaders can implement several effective strategies to close the AI skills gap. Provide Ongoing Professional Development. AI tools evolve rapidly, so teacher training must be continuous. Monthly sessions are more effective than annual conferences for developing practical skills. Develop Clear AI Policies. Teachers need frameworks for the appropriate use of AI that encourage experimentation while establishing clear boundaries and guidelines. These policies should address both the use of AI by teachers and students. Create Collaboration Opportunities. Teachers learn best from peers who share similar challenges and experiences. Professional learning communities focused on AI integration enable educators to share successes and collaborate on troubleshooting problems together. Allocate Time For Experimentation. Teachers need dedicated time to explore AI tools without pressure to implement them immediately. This exploration time reduces anxiety and builds genuine competence. The Bigger Picture: Preparing Students For An AI Future Teacher AI literacy serves a larger purpose than improving classroom efficiency. Students today will work in careers where AI collaboration is standard. They need adults who can model thoughtful AI use and help them develop critical evaluation skills. At WIT, I see young entrepreneurs who use AI effectively because they learned to combine artificial intelligence with human creativity and judgment. They verify AI outputs, understand limitations, and apply critical thinking to AI-generated ideas. Teachers who use AI thoughtfully can guide students toward productive AI partnerships that enhance rather than replace human capabilities. Moving Forward: The AI Choice Is Ours The AI skills gap in education won't close automatically. It requires intentional action from individual teachers, schools, and educational systems. But the effort pays dividends for both educators and students. Teachers who develop AI literacy report increased efficiency in lesson planning, more personalized instruction capabilities, and better preparation for supporting student learning. Students benefit from adults who can guide their use of AI toward productive and ethical applications. The goal isn't making teachers into AI experts. It's helping them become confident users who can guide students effectively. This starts with curiosity, continues with experimentation, and grows through practice and peer collaboration. Technology will continue advancing whether teachers participate or not. The choice is whether educators will lead this change or struggle to catch up. For the sake of students who need thoughtful AI guidance, teachers must choose to lead.


CBC
30-05-2025
- General
- CBC
Hide Search Search CBC Kids News SEARCH CBC Kids News Hot Topics Topics Settings MODE Hot Topics Light mode Wildfires Polls Sports Celebrities Canada-U.S. news Kids React Social Media Animals Space KID POVS Gaming KN Explains Extreme Nature Search Light mode WATCH — Heard the word propaganda? Let's break it down Published 2025-05-30 06:00 Aubrie Chan CBC Kids News Contributor Marielle Torrefranca Creative Producer Messages play on people's emotions Every once in a while, there's a word in the news that feels like it needs more explaining. CBC Kids News contributor Aubrie Chan uses her drawings to break it down for you. Have you seen the word 'propaganda' in news stories or posts online? Propaganda is a communications tool people use to change the way you think, act and feel. People often use it to manipulate others in a way that benefits a certain person, group or cause. So, how can you tell if you're looking at propaganda? CBC Kids News contributor Aubrie Chan breaks it down with her drawings. Watch the video to learn some tips to help you spot propaganda.⬇️⬇️⬇️ Want more media literacy-related content? Check out the stories below to learn more digital literacy skills: WATCH — Should you accept or reject website cookies? Here's what they are WATCH — Think you can spot a deepfake? WATCH — How to spot what's not real on TikTok WATCH — You spend how much time online? Kids and experts weigh in WATCH — A sneak peek into how we make explainer videos Have more questions? Want to tell us how we're doing? Use the 'send us feedback' link below. ⬇️⬇️⬇️ TOP IMAGE CREDIT: Aubrie Chan/CBC, graphic design by Philip Street/CBC Send us feedback Report a typo or inaccuracy Print Story Share to Google Classroom About the Contributor Aubrie Chan CBC Kids News Contributor Aubrie Chan is in Grade 12 and from Oakville, Ontario. She has an ever-changing set of hobbies, which currently include debate, animation and digital art, among other things. More Stories You Might Like 2023-11-08 06:00 WATCH — Heard of the word misinformation? Let's break it down 2023-11-08 06:00 WATCH — Heard of the word misinformation? Let's break it down 2023-11-08 06:00 WATCH — Heard of the word misinformation? Let's break it down 2023-12-20 06:00 WATCH — What are greenhouse gases? Let's break it down 2023-12-20 06:00 WATCH — What are greenhouse gases? Let's break it down 2023-12-20 06:00 WATCH — What are greenhouse gases? Let's break it down CBC Kids News Real kids, real news Privacy Terms of Use Copyright Policy Other Policies Contact Us Accessibility About Us About Cookies Feedback Form © 2025 CBC Kids News BACK TO TOP close this modal You are now leaving the CBC Kids News Website. Cancel Submit Cancel Submit close this modal
WATCH — Heard the word propaganda? Let's break it down Published 2025-05-30 06:00 Aubrie Chan CBC Kids News Contributor Marielle Torrefranca Creative Producer Messages play on people's emotions Every once in a while, there's a word in the news that feels like it needs more explaining. CBC Kids News contributor Aubrie Chan uses her drawings to break it down for you. Have you seen the word 'propaganda' in news stories or posts online? Propaganda is a communications tool people use to change the way you think, act and feel. People often use it to manipulate others in a way that benefits a certain person, group or cause. So, how can you tell if you're looking at propaganda? CBC Kids News contributor Aubrie Chan breaks it down with her drawings. Watch the video to learn some tips to help you spot propaganda.⬇️⬇️⬇️ Want more media literacy-related content? Check out the stories below to learn more digital literacy skills: WATCH — Should you accept or reject website cookies? Here's what they are WATCH — Think you can spot a deepfake? WATCH — How to spot what's not real on TikTok WATCH — You spend how much time online? Kids and experts weigh in WATCH — A sneak peek into how we make explainer videos Have more questions? Want to tell us how we're doing? Use the 'send us feedback' link below. ⬇️⬇️⬇️ TOP IMAGE CREDIT: Aubrie Chan/CBC, graphic design by Philip Street/CBC Send us feedback Report a typo or inaccuracy Print Story Share to Google Classroom About the Contributor Aubrie Chan CBC Kids News Contributor Aubrie Chan is in Grade 12 and from Oakville, Ontario. She has an ever-changing set of hobbies, which currently include debate, animation and digital art, among other things. More Stories You Might Like 2023-11-08 06:00 WATCH — Heard of the word misinformation? Let's break it down 2023-11-08 06:00 WATCH — Heard of the word misinformation? Let's break it down 2023-11-08 06:00 WATCH — Heard of the word misinformation? Let's break it down 2023-12-20 06:00 WATCH — What are greenhouse gases? Let's break it down 2023-12-20 06:00 WATCH — What are greenhouse gases? Let's break it down 2023-12-20 06:00 WATCH — What are greenhouse gases? Let's break it down Real kids, real news Privacy Terms of Use Copyright Policy Other Policies Contact Us Accessibility About Us About Cookies Feedback Form © 2025 CBC Kids News BACK TO TOP close this modal You are now leaving the CBC Kids News Website. Cancel Submit