Future Fluent

Jeremy Roschelle and Betsy Corcoran

What changes for us, as writers, as creators, as thinkers – as humans – when there are more AI bots in the world than people?  Telling stories about our lives and the world around us is one of the most intimate and powerful practices that we, as humans, have. And even though artificial intelligence has existed in some form for decades, only with the emergence of chatbots has AI become a storytelling machine.  So what does AI mean for human literacy? What changes when algorithmic intelligence tells stories about ourselves and our world? Should we let it? And really, who is telling the story–and why?  Join Dr. Jeremy Roschelle, the lead learning scientist at Digital Promise, and Betsy Corcoran, a journalist and founder of EdSurge, as they explore with writers, researchers, teachers and even policy makers the potential – both positive and negative – for AI, for literacy, and for us.  Please join the conversation here on our LinkedIn page. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  1. Charting a research-based future for AI in education in the Netherlands

    JAN 27

    Charting a research-based future for AI in education in the Netherlands

    At the National Education Lab AI (NOLAI) in the Netherlands, director Dr. Inge Molenaar sits at the epicenter of learning, research and AI. And the Netherlands has been a leader in Europe and throughout the world in the effective use of emerging technologies, Dr. Molenaar has an exceptional vantage for observing–and influencing–the emergent use of AI in learning. This week, she joins Jeremy Roschelle and Betsy Corcoran to talk about teacher and student agency, the fragile balance between learning and performance, and when AI works with teachers and students versus when it threatens to erode “self regulation.” And Jeremy poses a mind-bending question: When should a student be more like a trout? LEARN MORE!    A classic text for user design in the field is: Human-Centered AI, by Ben Shneiderman, Oxford University Press, June 2025. Shneiderman is a long-time leader in user design. Here Shneiderman gives an overview talk at the PSW Society (beginning at 16 minutes).  The website for the National Education Lab AI for elementary, secondary and special needs education in the Netherlands, funded by the National Growth Fund, including its research and its ongoing school-based projects.  The annual magazine overview of the National Education Lab in download PDF form and in English.  Fresh for 2026! The OECD’s Digital Education Outlook. (And the webinar overview).  Human-AI collaboration in education: The hybrid future, by Inga Molenarr, Inaugural address from Radboud University, September 2024.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    33 min
  2. Sidestepping AI’s ‘Nasty, Unintended Consequences’

    JAN 12

    Sidestepping AI’s ‘Nasty, Unintended Consequences’

    Pat Yongpradit has been the face of Code.org for a dozen years and is a prominent, worldwide AI literacy leader. Just this month, he’s also taken on a big new leadership role at Microsoft. We we know why he's in demand: He's bracingly clear eyed about the challenges educators face in 2026 and beyond. His “6-7” predictions for 2026 suggests AI will urther distance strong performers from weaker ones–hardly a win for equity. But in this conversation with Jeremy and Betsy, he offers a path for skirting this and other “nasty unintended but not unexpected consequences." Lots to explore!  Want to explore more about the ideas we discussed in this episode of Future Fluent? Check out these segments:  Pat Yongpradit’s website with a number of videos, including a discussion with ISTE’s Joseph South,  Khan Academy’s Kristin DiCerbo, and ETS’s Narmeen Makhani on AI and the future of education  Teach AI’s Draft AI Literacy Framework Code.org Organizational Jazz: New Ways to Work Adapting in the Flows of Change, by John Seely Brown, Tom Winans and Ann Pendleton-JulllianTechnology and the Rise of Great Powers: How Diffusion Shapes Economic Competition by Jeffrey Ding Tools and Weapons: The promise and the peril of the digital age by Brad Smith – and the podcast, “Tools & Weapons”  Hit Refresh: The Quest to Rediscover Microsoft’s Soul and Imagine a Better Future for Everyone by Satya Nadella Can’t Hurt Me: Master Your Mind and Defy the Odds by David Goggins  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    39 min
  3. Reading the Context: Becoming Fluent in AI through Play

    05/22/2025

    Reading the Context: Becoming Fluent in AI through Play

    We've moved from the "age of Enlightenment" to the "Age of Entanglement," says John Seely Brown, a long-time leading thinker, technologist and scholar on learning. In this episode of Future Fluent, Jeremy Roschelle and Betsy Corcoran go the source: JSB has done it all, from working at a bookie in high school to managing Xerox PARC, advising technology leaders and publishing more than 100 papers and books, many of which are on learning. JSB has spent his career experimenting -- and yes, playing -- with how the technology we build shapes the way we work and learn. What he's learned along the way? That learning, much like being part of a jazz group or surviving in the wilderness, involves constantly questioning and reexamining everything around us. "The notion of looking for the solution -- or even the (right) prompt doesn't compute anymore." So much to explore! John Seely Brown has published over 100 papers in scientific journals and nine books including coauthoring the acclaimed, The Social Life of Information (HBS Press, 2000) with Paul Duguid, which has been translated into nine languages.  You could dip into John Seely Brown’s website, which is packed with slides from past presentations.  Or take a look at any of these publications:  A New Culture of Learning: Cultivating the Imagination for a World of Constant Change by Douglas Thomas and John Seely Brown, 2011.  Design Unbound: Designing for Emergence in a White Water World, Volume 1: Designing for Emergence (Infrastructures) by Ann M. Pendleton-Julian and John Seely Brown, 2018.  Design Unbound: Designing for Emergence in a White Water World, Volume 2: Ecologies of Change (Infrastructures) by Ann M. Pendleton-Julian and John Seely Brown, 2018.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    44 min

Ratings & Reviews

4.7
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

What changes for us, as writers, as creators, as thinkers – as humans – when there are more AI bots in the world than people?  Telling stories about our lives and the world around us is one of the most intimate and powerful practices that we, as humans, have. And even though artificial intelligence has existed in some form for decades, only with the emergence of chatbots has AI become a storytelling machine.  So what does AI mean for human literacy? What changes when algorithmic intelligence tells stories about ourselves and our world? Should we let it? And really, who is telling the story–and why?  Join Dr. Jeremy Roschelle, the lead learning scientist at Digital Promise, and Betsy Corcoran, a journalist and founder of EdSurge, as they explore with writers, researchers, teachers and even policy makers the potential – both positive and negative – for AI, for literacy, and for us.  Please join the conversation here on our LinkedIn page. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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