NYC issues first AI guidelines for teachers, |
New York City’s public school system has released its first guidance on artificial intelligence (AI) in the classroom, allowing teachers to use the technology for tasks like lesson planning, research, and drafting materials, but prohibiting its use for grading student work or making disciplinary decisions. The 30-page playbook introduces a “traffic light” system to define acceptable, cautious, and banned uses, emphasizing that AI should support, not replace, teacher judgment and that student data privacy must be protected. The guidance reflects a broader effort to formalize AI use across nearly 1,600 schools, where practices have varied widely, and comes as other districts adopt similar policies and officials explore further integration, including a potential AI-focused high school. While some educators and experts welcome clearer guardrails, others warn the technology remains poorly understood, potentially unreliable, and controversial, with concerns about bias, accuracy, student learning impacts, and the need for better teacher training and ongoing policy updates.