In Honor of Eric LeGrand: AI and the Future of Spinal Cord Injury Recovery
Before ESPN told his story, before his number was known across New Jersey, Eric LeGrand was in my freshman Algebra […]
Learn how AI is changing education for students and lifelong learners—from virtual tutors to curriculum design.
Before ESPN told his story, before his number was known across New Jersey, Eric LeGrand was in my freshman Algebra […]
I’m not an expert in AI. I’m curious. AI shows up in the news daily, and I can’t help but
AI is already in the room when people are in crisis—but right now, all it does is whisper a hotline number. That isn’t enough. In this post, I propose a simple, visible safeguard: phones that flash red when suicidal language is detected. A blinking light that interrupts secrecy, breaks the trance, and reminds us that some moments are too serious to stay hidden.
What if AI could make students think harder, not less?
I took a simple algebra problem and turned ChatGPT into a reasoning detective. Instead of grading answers, I graded the conversation—and the results might just change how we teach.
Let the Chat Be the Assignment As I write this blog post, I have a chatbot open on my screen.
We don’t talk enough about how much we shape our AI—and how much it, in turn, reflects who we are.