AI Era: Redefining Teaching and Learning - Couverture rigide

Pu, Paul; Slotta, Prof Jim

 
9781067404925: AI Era: Redefining Teaching and Learning

Synopsis

AI Era: Redefining Teaching and Learning
Paul Pu & Jim Slotta

When AI can generate answers in seconds, what should students still learn for themselves?

Generative AI did not break education. It exposed a deeper problem inside the system. For more than a century, schools have been organized around industrial-age assumptions: standardize time, knowledge, and tests, then prepare young people for predictable roles. That model once had a purpose. But when answers are easy to generate, education must ask: what should anchor learning now?

The authors call this educational drift: schools moving faster while losing sight of what education is for. Students achieve more yet often feel less direction. Parents invest more yet worry more. Teachers work harder yet feel stretched. Meanwhile, young people are growing up fluent with powerful tools they may not yet know how to question, verify, or use responsibly.

AI Era: Redefining Teaching and Learning is written for educators, school leaders, parents, and policymakers who want to move beyond panic, prohibition, and superficial AI adoption. It offers a human-centered framework for learning in the age of generative AI.

At the heart of the book is the Anchored Learning Model, a practical approach that keeps students grounded in evidence, responsibility, real-world verification, and human connection while making thoughtful use of AI.

The book introduces:

  • The 3+4 Model — three interdependent intelligences: AI Literacy, Hands-on Intelligence, and Social Intelligence, developed through Drive, Creation, Bond, and Compass.
  • School 2.0 — a human-centered learning community connecting classrooms with real-world problems, ethical governance, and evidence-based credentialing.
  • Talent 2.0 — a vision of the educated person as someone who can use AI wisely, verify claims, make responsible decisions, and act when consequences are real.

Drawing on research, UNESCO’s ESD and GCED frameworks, PISA/NAEP data, China’s Double Reduction policy, and conversations with Geoffrey Hinton, Mingyuan Gu, Charles Hopkins, and Katrin Kohl, the authors combine global perspective with classroom insight.

Each chapter includes guiding insights, discussion questions, and AI exercises. The appendices provide a 30/60/90-day action blueprint, a six-week Anchors-and-Sails unit model, and templates for Evidence Chains, Failure Logs, AI Logs, oral defenses, and reflection. These tools make thinking visible so students must question, verify, revise, and take responsibility. AI can support the process, but it cannot replace human judgment.

Praise for the book:

“Highly illuminating. Teachers have now become partners, taking on the work of guidance and calibration.”
— Ruth Hayhoe, Professor, University of Toronto

“This book reminds us that our core mission remains nurturing the human person. Grounded in research and practice, it highlights the growth, emotions, and values of students.”
— Mingyuan Gu, Professor, Beijing Normal University

“An essential reference and catalyst for dialogue among educators worldwide.”
— Mark Zhang, Professor, Binghamton University, SUNY

Foreword by Charles Hopkins and Katrin Kohl, UNESCO Chair and Co-Chair, York University.

This book is for teachers seeking to integrate AI without losing depth or integrity; parents worried that their child is working hard in a system whose direction feels uncertain; school leaders redesigning curriculum and assessment; and policymakers connecting AI literacy with sustainability, equity, and global citizenship.

The era of training young people to become cogs in a machine is passing. The choice is clear: let AI deepen educational drift, or use this moment to rediscover the purpose of education. AI Era offers a roadmap for choosing direction over drift.

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