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Recent Editions
Education Slice
National
Artificial intelligence (AI) is making phishing attacks more sophisticated and harder to detect, creating growing cybersecurity and student safety challenges for K–12 schools as attackers increasingly target trusted educational platforms such as Google Workspace and Microsoft 365. Cybercriminals are using AI to create highly convincing messages and content that can bypass conventional defenses and exploit the trust-based environments common in schools. Beyond external threats, educators are also confronting the misuse of generative AI by students, including the creation of deepfake images, videos, and voice recordings. With more than 85% of teachers and students reportedly using AI during the 2024–25 school year, schools face increasing pressure to balance AI’s educational benefits with emerging safety and reputational risks. Experts suggest that schools should adopt a three-pronged approach centered on updated policies, AI literacy and training, and modern cybersecurity tools capable of identifying unusual behavior patterns across cloud-based learning environments. Examples include detecting suspicious file-sharing activity, unusual account access, or unauthorized changes to sensitive data permissions.
Full Issue
Education Slice
California
A growing ecosystem of AI-powered apps is helping students conceal the use of AI in schoolwork, prompting concerns among educators about academic integrity and the erosion of critical thinking skills. Tools known as “humanizers” rewrite AI-generated text to appear more natural, while “autotypers” simulate human writing behavior by gradually entering text, adding edits, and creating version histories designed to evade AI-detection software. Many of these products are heavily promoted on TikTok and YouTube, with some companies openly marketing their ability to help students avoid detection. At the same time, several established educational technology firms offer both AI-writing assistance and AI-detection tools, highlighting what industry leaders describe as an escalating technological arms race between detection and evasion. Educators increasingly worry that widespread reliance on AI may undermine skill development, while technology companies argue that AI-assisted writing will become a standard part of education and future workplace expectations.
Full Issue
Education Slice
Texas
A growing ecosystem of artificial intelligence (AI)-powered apps is helping students conceal the use of artificial intelligence in schoolwork, prompting concerns among educators about academic integrity and the erosion of critical thinking skills. Tools known as “humanizers” rewrite AI-generated text to appear more natural, while “autotypers” simulate human writing behavior by gradually entering text, adding edits, and creating version histories designed to evade AI-detection software. Many of these products are heavily promoted on TikTok and YouTube, with some companies openly marketing their ability to help students avoid detection. At the same time, several established educational technology firms offer both AI-writing assistance and AI-detection tools, highlighting what industry leaders describe as an escalating technological arms race between detection and evasion. Educators increasingly worry that widespread reliance on AI may undermine skill development, while technology companies argue that AI-assisted writing will become a standard part of education and future workplace expectations.
Full Issue
Education Slice
Florida
A recent survey from RAND Corporation found that just under 20% of teachers planned to leave their jobs at the end of the 2025-26 school year, with many educators citing a combination of factors rather than a single cause. Teachers pointed to student misbehavior, inadequate compensation, poor work-life balance, excessive paperwork, growing administrative demands, and a lack of support from school leaders as major sources of stress. Many respondents said the profession has become increasingly unsustainable due to mounting responsibilities, technology-related challenges, and declining respect for educators, while others described chronic exhaustion and burnout after years in the classroom. Although many teachers who consider leaving ultimately remain, those who do exit often report finding higher-paying jobs with less stress and better work-life balance outside education.
Full Issue