Hi, Karl!
I don't know that I have anything to add to this list. It did bring to mind the graphic below from a report we put out when I was with the U.S. Department of education. If we are jumping to the doing of the thing, we run the risk of asking how we want the thing (in this case AI) to operate within our human-based systems.

Without shared expectations of how these tools/resources are at play within our learning communities, we are letting are somewhere between letting "a thousand flowers bloom" and hoping we escape the tragedy of the commons. It has been easy to shrug off much of the possible pedagogical implications of technologies over the last decade or two. In AI, though, we appear to have a moment where the conversation of are our shared expectations of the "actions and attributes" of technology in education is inescapable.
The full report can be found here - https://www.ed.gov/sites/ed/files/documents/ai-report/ai-report.pdf
Thank you for opening the conversation!