At least, for now, I’m going to make this a weekly feature which will highlight additions to THE BEST NEW – & FREE – ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE TOOLS THAT COULD BE USED IN THE CLASSROOM.
Here are the latest:
Draw Charts lets you hand draw…charts – for free. I’m adding it to The Best Tools To Make Simple Graphs Online.
Getting the Most Out of Free AI Tools is from TCEA. I’m adding it to NOT NECESSARILY THE “BEST,” BUT A LIST OF AI TEACHER PREP SITES.
Univer.se lets you use AI to create websites.
Speak is a language learning tool with a limited free plan.
Pronounce is another language learning tool with a limited free plan.
Create a fantasy world with ifantasy.
Aiva uses AI to create music.
Porosheets uses AI to create worksheets. I’m adding it to NOT NECESSARILY THE “BEST,” BUT A LIST OF AI TEACHER PREP SITES.
I’m adding FlintK12 to the same list, along with Rubricpro.
Researchers secretly added AI-created the papers to the exam pool: “We found that 94% of our AI submissions were undetected. The grades awarded to our AI submissions were on average half a grade boundary higher than that achieved by real students.“ https://t.co/z8IX14133B. https://t.co/qFtq7PDjzn pic.twitter.com/JDmET3q7pw
— Ethan Mollick (@emollick) June 26, 2024
I’m skeptic of AI use in schls generally.However,it saves me lot of time in creating good quality materials 4 English Language Learners,& it can be very helpful in giving pronunciation & grammar feedback 2 students.It’s not revolutionary, but it’s not nothing, either.Not worth destroying planet, tho
— Larry Ferlazzo (@larryferlazzo.bsky.social) November 20, 2024 at 1:06 PM
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