In Newark classroom, students learn to drive AI, not ride along with chatbots |
As artificial intelligence (AI) becomes more embedded in daily life, some U.S. high schools are introducing AI literacy courses aimed at teaching students to use the technology thoughtfully and responsibly rather than relying on it passively. At North Star Academy Washington Park High School in Newark, seniors are taking a new elective that frames AI as something students should “drive,” not be driven by. Teachers Mike Taubman and Scott Kern developed the course to help students critically examine AI tools, understand their societal impact, and set personal guidelines for responsible use. Lessons range from analyzing how algorithms shape social media feeds to debating authorship and intellectual property in AI-generated art. In history class, students test their arguments against teacher-designed chatbots, which challenge their reasoning without replacing foundational critical thinking. Educators emphasize that core learning activities, such as initial analysis and peer discussions, should remain AI-free. The class comes amid national debate over AI in schools. While proponents argue students need AI skills to compete in a technology-driven economy, critics warn that chatbots can enable cheating, spread misinformation, and erode comprehension. Some studies suggest students retain more information when working independently rather than relying on AI assistance. Newark’s approach seeks a middle ground: equipping students to understand how AI works, question its outputs, and help shape its future development. School leaders hope to expand the course to all seniors.