AI for Educators Daily with Dan Fitzpatrick

Dan Fitzpatrick, The AI Educator

Hey, I'm Dan, The AI Educator. I know that we both care deeply about the state of education, amid the uncertainty of rapidly advancing AI. I work with leading schools and governments worldwide to help them strategise and build capability, and I have recently been recognised as a top voice on AI. While most teachers are aware of the influence of AI on education and student learning, many are unsure how to respond in practice. My mission is to amplify credible expert insight and give educators the clarity, confidence, and tools they need to teach effectively and prepare students.

  1. Navigating AI-generated content

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    Navigating AI-generated content

    Send us Fan Mail 70% of people can't spot AI deepfakes, leaving students vulnerable to hidden AI in advertising without proper AI literacy. In this episode: A *Guardian* investigation revealed that 70% of people cannot detect *AI deepfakes*, making students vulnerable to hidden *AI in advertising*.Brands like *Once* and *Maket* are using undisclosed *AI generated content* and *AI-generated influencers* due to lower costs and fewer risks compared to human talent.Current *AI transparency rules* are lagging; the UK's *Advertising Standards Authority* doesn't explicitly prohibit undisclosed AI, although the EU will require labeling.Developing *AI influencers ethics* and critical AI literacy is paramount for educators to equip students to navigate a world saturated with AI-generated information.Educators must foster critical thinking skills, including basic *AI deepfake detection*, and discussions around *AI transparency rules* in the classroom.Chapters: 00:00 — Cold open & welcome00:30 — The Guardian's investigation into undisclosed AI in advertising01:15 — Case studies: Once, Maket, and Ashle using AI-generated influencers02:15 — Educational implications: Why AI literacy is crucial for students03:00 — Why brands use AI: Cost savings and managing public image03:45 — The blurring lines of authenticity and 'plausible deniability' in AI content04:30 — Regulatory response: Which?, Lisa Barber, and the Advertising Standards Authority05:15 — The urgent need for AI deepfake detection and AI transparency rules in education06:00 — Cultivating human judgment and ethics over technological prowessHow can teachers equip students to identify *AI deepfakes* and *AI generated content*? Teachers can equip students by fostering AI literacy as a critical thinking skill, teaching them to question AI outputs, biases, and intent, and discussing *AI transparency rules* in the classroom. What are the ethical concerns surrounding *AI in advertising* and *AI influencers ethics*? Ethical concerns include misleading consumers with undisclosed *AI generated content*, eroding trust, and the potential for manipulation when 70% of people cannot detect fake videos. Are there *AI transparency rules* or regulations for brands using *AI-generated influencers*? Currently, the UK's *Advertising Standards Authority* does not explicitly prohibit undisclosed *AI generated content*, though the EU's new Artificial Intelligence Act will require deepfakes to be labeled. Featuring: Dan Fitzpatrick, Once, Maket, Ashle, Reality Defenders, Get Real Labs, Which?, Advertising Standards Authority, Lisa Barber. Follow AI in Education with Dan Fitzpatrick for more on AI in education.

    8 min
  2. AI Critical Thinking Education: Addressing Bias in Classroom AI

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    AI Critical Thinking Education: Addressing Bias in Classroom AI

    Send us Fan Mail Almost 30% of Saudi teachers already correct biased AI outputs, highlighting an urgent need for students to interrogate AI, not just trust it. In this episode: A 2025 Saudi Arabia survey found nearly 30% of teachers are already correcting AI bias in education, highlighting an urgent need for students to interrogate AI.The core issue: most AI tools are trained on English-language and Western-dominant datasets, creating linguistic and cultural blind spots in AI-generated knowledge for diverse learners.Teachers must evolve into 'epistemic intermediaries,' guiding students in AI critical thinking education by modeling how to assess AI outputs for accuracy and cultural relevance.True AI literacy for students involves collaborative reasoning and actively critiquing AI responses, not just passively accepting them.Designing assessment tasks around "Product, Process, and Performance" can ensure students engage in cognitive stretch, applying unique context and judgment, which cannot be faked by AI tools.Chapters: 00:00 — Cold open & welcome00:25 — Saudi Arabia's AI bias challenge: 30% of teachers correcting AI00:55 — Cultural and linguistic blind spots in AI tools01:50 — AI critical thinking education: shifting from teacher as authority to AI interrogator02:45 — The teacher's new role: 'epistemic intermediary' assessing AI outputs03:50 — Redefining AI literacy for students: collaborative reasoning and critique04:45 — Saudi Arabia's proactive approach to addressing AI bias in education05:25 — School leaders: prioritizing AI critical thinking education over technology adoption06:10 — Protecting human judgment, imagination, and wisdom in responsible AI in education06:45 — Knowledge transmission to knowledge interrogation: The core shiftHow can teachers address AI bias in education in their classrooms? Teachers can address AI bias by becoming 'epistemic intermediaries,' systematically assessing AI-generated content with students for factual accuracy, linguistic precision, cultural relevance, and contextual appropriateness. What does AI critical thinking education look like for students? AI critical thinking education involves teaching students to systematically critique AI responses, compare outputs across languages, identify inconsistencies, and consciously inject missing cultural nuance into AI-generated content. Why is responsible AI in education crucial for non-English dominant contexts? Responsible AI in education is crucial because most AI tools are trained on English-language and Western-dominant datasets, leading to inherent linguistic and cultural blind spots that can misrepresent local realities for students in other regions. Featuring: Dan Fitzpatrick, Basmah AlBuhairan, Reem Taibah, Amani AlOlayani, King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology, Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution Saudi Arabia, Ministry of Education, Saudi Arabia, World Economic Forum. Follow AI in Education with Dan Fitzpatrick for more on AI in education.

    9 min
  3. AI and oracy skills: The most valuable graduate skill in the AI age

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    AI and oracy skills: The most valuable graduate skill in the AI age

    Send us Fan Mail 94% of students used AI in assessed work by 2026; learn why AI weakens core knowledge vital for genuine oracy. In this episode: A 2026 Higher Education Policy Institute survey revealed 94% of students used AI in assessed work, necessitating a renewed focus on oral communication education.Bruce Hood argues that AI, while not directly harming oracy, weakens the core knowledge and synthesis abilities vital for genuine oral communication, impacting graduate employability skills.Employers now prioritize verbal communication and soft skills over grades, highlighting the increasing importance of assessing oral communication for future job markets.The Three Minute Thesis (3MT) competition, pioneered by the University of Queensland, demonstrates a successful model for developing advanced oral communication skills in students.Educators should shift from solely written assignments to incorporate more oral assessments to build essential AI and oracy skills from primary school through higher education.Chapters: 00:00 — Cold open & welcome00:25 — 94% of students using AI in assessed work00:55 — Employer demand for oral communication education01:30 — How AI weakens core knowledge for AI and oracy skills02:25 — The strategic choice for integrating oral communication education03:05 — Designing learning tasks for oral communication beyond written reports03:50 — Assessing oral communication: Product, Process, and Performance04:30 — Embedding oracy skills through professional development and AI Mavericks05:15 — The Three Minute Thesis (3MT) as a model for developing graduate employability skills05:55 — Oracy as the human differentiator in an AI-augmented worldHow does AI impact student skills for oral communication education? AI can weaken the foundational knowledge and deep synthesis required for effective oral communication by performing too much of the cognitive heavy lifting that students previously did themselves. What graduate employability skills are most valued by employers in the AI age? Employers increasingly value verbal communication, critical thinking, authenticity, and the ability to establish credibility and respond on the fly, as reported by the National Association of Colleges and Employers and CBI Economics. How can educators improve assessing oral communication in the AI era? Educators can shift focus to oral assessments like debates, presentations, conversational exams, and performance-based tasks that require students to apply knowledge dynamically and respond to spontaneous questions. Featuring: Dan Fitzpatrick, Bruce Hood, Higher Education Policy Institute, National Association of Colleges and Employers, CBI Economics, University of Queensland, Three Minute Thesis, My-Thesis, University of Bristol. Follow AI in Education with Dan Fitzpatrick for more on AI in education.

    9 min
  4. AI for underserved classrooms: Powerful learning with no internet

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    AI for underserved classrooms: Powerful learning with no internet

    Send us Fan Mail An AI maths tutor on WhatsApp boosts learning a year for $5/child, proving AI for underserved classrooms doesn't need fast internet or expensive tech. In this episode: An AI maths tutor named Rori on WhatsApp is achieving a year of learning gains for just $5 per child, demonstrating powerful AI for underserved classrooms without needing fast internet.Solutions like FoondaMate and Juza AI prove that offline AI education and low-resource AI learning can effectively support millions of students in developing countries.A 2025 UNESCO paper advocates for an 'offline-first' principle for scaling AI in African schools, highlighting the importance of resilient edtech in developing countries.Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) can provide shared resources like local-language corpora and governance rails, enabling more effective and equitable AI for underserved classrooms to scale.Pedagogy and teacher trust are non-negotiable; AI tools must align with how children learn and enhance, not replace, the teacher's role for successful implementation.Chapters: 00:00 — Cold open & welcome00:30 — Rori: AI for underserved classrooms on WhatsApp01:30 — Challenging assumptions: AI doesn't need perfect infrastructure02:45 — The paradigm shift to low-resource AI learning03:45 — Evidence of AI in African schools: FoondaMate, GlobeDock, Juza AI04:45 — Building for constraints: Offline AI education and edge computing benefits05:45 — The missing scaffolding: Education Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI)07:15 — Non-negotiables: Pedagogy and the teacher's role08:30 — Strategic investment for AI in African schools09:00 — Conclusion: AI for the world as it isHow can AI support learning in underserved classrooms without internet? AI tools like Rori, FoondaMate, and Juza AI demonstrate that effective learning can occur using simple phones, minimal data, or entirely offline 'AI in a box' solutions by syncing data periodically or running models locally. What are the key benefits of low-resource AI learning for students? Low-resource AI learning provides accessible, affordable, and high-quality educational support to a broad range of students, particularly the 'middle 80%' who may not have access to traditional tutors or high-tech solutions. What is Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) and how does it help scale edtech in developing countries? DPI creates a shared, public layer of educational resources such as curriculum-aligned content, local-language data, and governance standards, allowing local developers to build scalable, safe, and interoperable AI solutions. Featuring: Dan Fitzpatrick, WhatsApp, Rori, FoondaMate, World Bank, Messenger, GlobeDock Academy, Juza AI, UNESCO. Follow AI in Education with Dan Fitzpatrick for more on AI in education.

    11 min
  5. AI education anxiety: How educators can help students navigate job market fears

    26 juni

    AI education anxiety: How educators can help students navigate job market fears

    Send us Fan Mail 47% of US students considered changing their major due to AI's job market impact, revealing rational AI education anxiety. In this episode: A Gallup and Lumina Foundation survey found 47% of US students considered changing their major due to AI education anxiety, highlighting a rational fear.Educators must shift from 'transmission of knowledge' to building 'deep capacity' in students, focusing on metacognitive skills and lifelong learning as core AI skills for teachers to impart.Microsoft research reveals a risk of 'misplaced confidence' when students use AI without proper pedagogy, underscoring the need for critical thinking over tool mastery to counter the AI impact on students.The future of education AI hinges on teacher capacity; simply providing AI tools to students is ineffective without equipping teachers with the skills to integrate them meaningfully.Protecting student intellectual property and promoting AI literacy for educators are crucial ethical considerations to ensure AI empowers individuals rather than consolidating value.Chapters: 00:00 — Cold open & welcome00:25 — Understanding AI education anxiety: The 47% student impact00:55 — Justin Spelhaug's perspective: Why student fear is rational01:50 — Beyond fear: The shifting job market and future of education AI02:40 — Equipping students for change: Durable AI skills for teachers03:45 — The danger of misplaced confidence and AI impact on students04:40 — Teachers as change agents: Why AI literacy for educators starts here05:40 — Ethical considerations: Who owns the upside of AI?06:45 — Navigating fear with learning: Making us more humanHow many students are changing their majors due to AI education anxiety? A recent Gallup and Lumina Foundation survey found that 47% of US students considered changing their major due to AI's job market impact, and 16% had already done so. What AI skills should teachers focus on to prepare students for the future? Teachers should focus on imparting metacognitive capabilities, such as critical thinking, creativity, insight, and fostering a lifelong learning mindset, which are durable AI skills for teachers and essential for the future of education AI. How can educators ensure students effectively use AI tools and avoid misplaced confidence? Educators must design learning experiences that demand depth and critical review, emphasizing that AI outputs are drafts, to prevent students from gaining confidence without true knowledge, thereby mitigating the negative AI impact on students. Featuring: Dan Fitzpatrick, Justin Spelhaug, Microsoft Elevate, Microsoft, Forbes, Tech for Social Impact, Gallup, Lumina Foundation, Stanford. Follow AI in Education with Dan Fitzpatrick for more on AI in education.

    12 min
  6. AI job creation education: Preparing for a future labor shortage

    26 juni

    AI job creation education: Preparing for a future labor shortage

    Send us Fan Mail Jeff Bezos says AI won't replace jobs but cause a labor shortage, demanding new skills and radically reshaping AI job creation education. In this episode: Jeff Bezos predicts AI will lead to a labor shortage, not job replacement, profoundly impacting AI job creation education.AI's expansion into physical manufacturing and human-robot interaction demands new AI skills for teachers and students alike.The future of work will require uniquely human skills such as judgment, ethics, and creativity, integrating humans deeply into AI-driven processes.Educators should prepare students for roles that do not yet exist, emphasizing collaboration with AI and understanding its physical and ethical limitations.Professional development must empower teachers to explore the AI future of work and strategically embed AI skills into existing curricula.Chapters: 00:00 — Cold open & welcome00:28 — Jeff Bezos's surprising AI labor shortage prediction at VivaTech Paris01:00 — AI job creation education: Enhancement, not replacement01:45 — AI in manufacturing: Prometheus and the evolving nature of jobs02:30 — AI moving into the physical world: Unitree robots and brain-computer interaction03:15 — Redefining AI literacy for physical AI collaboration in schools04:15 — Cultivating uniquely human skills: Wonder, judgment, and ethics for the AI future of work05:00 — Transforming professional development: AI skills for teachers as change agents05:45 — Outthinking machines: Optimistic future of human ingenuity with AIWhat is Jeff Bezos's prediction about the AI impact on jobs? Jeff Bezos predicts that AI will lead to a labor shortage by creating new opportunities and increasing demand for human labor, rather than causing mass redundancies. How does AI job creation education need to change based on this prediction? AI job creation education must pivot to prepare students for roles that don't yet exist, focusing on human-in-the-loop skills like critical thinking, judgment, and ethical reasoning that collaborate deeply with AI. What are some new AI skills for teachers to consider for the future of work? Teachers need to develop skills in understanding the ethical and safety considerations of physical AI, designing human-AI interaction protocols, and fostering uniquely human capabilities like imagination and empathy in their students. Featuring: Dan Fitzpatrick, Jeff Bezos, Amazon, Prometheus, VivaTech Paris, Blue Origin, Unitree, HABS, Rishi Sunak. Follow AI in Education with Dan Fitzpatrick for more on AI in education.

    8 min
  7. AI English language learning: Israel's bold education revolution

    24 juni

    AI English language learning: Israel's bold education revolution

    Send us Fan Mail Israel is launching AI English language learning for middle schoolers to combat a 40% English teacher shortage, but pilot data is still pending. In this episode: Israel is rolling out AI English language learning across middle schools via 'Project 720' and 'English for Everyone' to tackle a 40% English teacher shortage.Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Education Minister Yoav Kisch announced this significant AI in education Israel initiative, aiming for AI personalized learning tailored to individual student needs.Despite a substantial NIS 130 million budget for teaching English with AI, concerns remain regarding the lack of public pilot data, reliance on existing school infrastructure, and the timing of teacher training.Experts caution that screen-based, passive AI use may not be optimal for foundational language acquisition, advocating for AI to enhance, not replace, crucial human interaction.The initiative involves major tech players like Google and Microsoft, underscoring the need for careful design to ensure educational outcomes and teacher empowerment remain central.Chapters: 00:00 — Cold open & welcome00:30 — Israel's AI English language learning initiative unveiled by Benjamin Netanyahu and Yoav Kisch01:00 — Project 720 and English for Everyone: AI personalized learning to combat teacher shortage01:45 — Pilot program success claims and the crucial lack of public data for AI in education Israel02:45 — Budget concerns and the challenges of infrastructure and teacher training for teaching English with AI03:45 — Expert warnings on screen time, passive learning, and the social aspects of language acquisition04:45 — The 'Enhancement, Not Replacement' principle for AI in education05:30 — Prioritizing pedagogy and student engagement in AI personalized learning, featuring Google and MicrosoftHow is Israel using AI to teach English? Israel is launching Project 720 and English for Everyone, two initiatives to introduce AI English language learning for middle schoolers to provide personalized instruction and address a significant teacher shortage. What are the concerns about AI in education Israel initiatives? Concerns include the lack of released pilot data backing claims of success, reliance on potentially inadequate existing digital infrastructure, belated teacher training, and expert warnings about the potential for screen-based, passive AI learning to hinder foundational development and human interaction crucial for language acquisition. Can AI truly personalize English language learning effectively? While AI personalized learning holds promise for differentiation, experts caution that its effectiveness hinges on careful design that enhances, rather than replaces, human interaction and pedagogical support, focusing on active student engagement rather than passive consumption. Featuring: Dan Fitzpatrick, Benjamin Netanyahu, Yoav Kisch, Dekel Vilnai Middle School, Project 720, English for Everyone, Meirav Zarviv, Google, Microsoft. Follow AI in Education with Dan Fitzpatrick for more on AI in education.

    10 min

Om

Hey, I'm Dan, The AI Educator. I know that we both care deeply about the state of education, amid the uncertainty of rapidly advancing AI. I work with leading schools and governments worldwide to help them strategise and build capability, and I have recently been recognised as a top voice on AI. While most teachers are aware of the influence of AI on education and student learning, many are unsure how to respond in practice. My mission is to amplify credible expert insight and give educators the clarity, confidence, and tools they need to teach effectively and prepare students.

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