Thursday, March 19, 2026

The New Distinction Infographic

Source: ASIDE 2026

Artificial intelligence can already summarize information, compile research, and generate polished content in seconds. Tasks that once defined academic success—recalling facts, listing timelines, and reporting information—are now easily outsourced. As a result, the value of learning has shifted.

Today’s learners must move beyond recounting events to interpreting their significance. They are expected to ask why something matters, connect ideas across contexts, and analyze patterns and implications. This includes applying ethical reasoning, considering impact, and forming defensible positions supported by evidence. Instead of reciting information, learners must synthesize it into a deeper understanding and original insight. In other words, they must make meaning from it.

 

Saturday, March 14, 2026

The New Distinction: Knowing Things Is No Longer Enough

Source: ASIDE 2026

In 2026, Knowing Things Is No Longer Enough

There is a shift happening in education that is easy to miss if you are not paying close attention. It is not about whether learners are using AI — they are. While schools are still designing policies and guidelines around AI use, learners are not waiting; in many cases, they are far ahead of their instructors. That gap is not a crisis to be managed. It is an invitation to rethink what we are actually asking students to do.

Consider how learning has always worked at its best. It resembles the work of migrating hunter-gatherers far more than it does the static absorption of facts — exploratory, connective, driven by curiosity and necessity. Technology has simply expanded the landscape in which that exploration happens. Rather than resisting that shift, education must harness it, channeling students' natural curiosity, their energy, and their intuitive understanding of networks and ideas into something more demanding: the ability to think.

For years, the hardest part of any research assignment was finding and organizing information. Students had to locate credible sources, synthesize their findings, and present them clearly. That was genuinely difficult work, and we designed assessments around it. That work is no longer difficult — not for AI. In seconds, an AI tool can summarize an event, compile research from dozens of sources, generate a clear explanation, reproduce a timeline, and produce polished content on demand. The floor of what a student can submit has risen dramatically, and it has nothing to do with what that student actually understands.

This raises an important question: where do teachers and learners stand as curators of knowledge? And more importantly, where do we want to be? Many educators find themselves somewhere in the middle — balancing tradition and innovation — while their students, outside of school, are already navigating vast digital landscapes on their own terms. The instinct to explore and connect is already there. Our job is to deepen it.

We should not restrict learners from using AI. Instead, we should teach them to use it with intention and rigor. In practice, this means treating prompt-writing as an intellectual discipline — one that requires students to define their thinking before they can direct the tool. We work with students to craft prompts that push AI to reason critically, operate within constraints, and evaluate specific arguments. The goal is not to produce a cleaner output. It is to make the students' thinking visible, contestable, and their own.

The assignment has not changed; the stakes have. We do not need to ban AI to respond to this shift — we need to design around it. That means assignments that reward synthesis over summary, prompts that demand a position rather than a recitation, and assessments that require students to explain their reasoning, not just their conclusions.

The "So what?" — that final, essential question that pushes beyond what happened to why it matters — has always been the hardest part of good thinking. Now it is also the most important measure of whether thinking happened at all.

This is the new distinction: AI can report, but learners must reason. That capacity is what education is for. It always was. AI has simply made it impossible to pretend otherwise.






Thursday, February 19, 2026

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

The “So What?” Has Changed With AI

Over twenty years ago, we launched an eighth-grade independent research project affectionately known as the IRP. The goal was to cultivate independence and self-direction within a defined time frame while honoring the power of student choice in self-guided learning. That choice fueled motivation and passion. What began as a project rooted in the American History curriculum evolved into IRP World, with a broader focus on global change.

The final component of the project—the “so what?”—had always been both the most important and the most challenging part of the process. We pushed students to move beyond reporting events and instead examine impact. How did this event influence societal, financial, political, or cultural change in that region of the world? The project was not about summarizing information; it was anchored in analysis.

In 2026, this emphasis on the “so what?” is even more critical. Reporting facts is no longer the hardest task. AI tools can summarize events, compile research, and generate explanations in seconds. What distinguishes student thinking now is not what happened, but why it matters.

The “so what?” has become the clearest evidence of human reasoning. Students must move beyond information that AI can easily produce and demonstrate judgment, perspective, and synthesis. They must ask:

  • Why does this impact matter now?

  • Who benefits, who is harmed, and why?

  • What patterns, tensions, or implications are not immediately obvious?

In this context, the project is intentionally not about content reproduction. Instead, it centers on interpretation, ethical reasoning, contextual understanding, and original insight. A strong thesis reflects discernment, not just information.

Ownership in 2026 also means deciding what cannot be outsourced to AI. The “so what?” is where students demonstrate that they are not simply informed, but thoughtful, critical, and capable of making meaning in a complex world.

Source: ASIDE, 2026



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