The Importance of Student Inquiry in the Age of AI

Published on ‎08-04-2025 12:34 PM by Community Manager | Updated on ‎08-25-2025 06:13 AM

OVERVIEW

Curiosity, questions, wonder - these human qualities serve as powerful drivers of learning in the age of AI. This modern era is changing at a breakneck speed, leaving educators to grapple with how to best prepare learners for their future. In light of that reality, inquiry is one of the human superpowers that will need special attention and cultivation for our current students. This is an era that students will need to hone in on what humans are good at so that they can then engage the technology in relevant and meaningful ways. Reminding us that it is the learning focus first and then the technological connections. The goal is for students to be perpetually learning, questioning and growing throughout this era of rampant change. Using inquiry methods will not only engage students in powerful thinking habits, but can also address student apathy and disengagement. During this session we will work to create a human focused learning environment leveraging the effectiveness of inquiry methods and technology. Specific classroom resources, unit plans and rubric will be shared.

Note: This event will be recorded and available for later viewing.

PRESENTER

Diana LaufenbergDiana LaufenbergFor 16 years Diana Laufenberg was a secondary social studies teacher in Wisconsin, Kansas, Arizona and Pennsylvania. She most recently taught at the Science Leadership Academy in Philadelphia, an inquiry-driven, project-based high school focused on modern learning. Her practice has deep roots in experiential education, taking students from the classroom to the real world and back again. Prior to her work in Philadelphia, she was an active member of the teaching community in Flagstaff, AZ where she was named Technology Teacher of the Year for Arizona and a member of the Governor's Master Teacher Corps. Diana was featured on TED.com for her “How to Learn? From Mistakes” and recognized for earning National Board Certification. Her publications include a featured piece on the New York Times Learning blog, co-authoring a chapter in an educational leadership book, and an article in the Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy

In 2013, Diana Laufenberg partnered with Chris Lehmann to start Inquiry Schools, a non-profit working to create and support student centered learning environments that are inquiry driven, project based and utilizing modern technology. She currently serves as the Executive Director and Lead Teacher for Inquiry Schools. When she is not working, she can be found frolicking in the forests and lakes of Wisconsin.




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Starts:
Wed, Oct 1, 2025 03:00 PM PDT
Ends:
Wed, Oct 1, 2025 04:00 PM PDT
3 Comments
vm
New Contributor

Interesting information but a quick search reveals this is just a copy/paste of someone else's writing without any link back to the source. So, how do you feel about Plagiarism in the age of Ai>?

zacmonday
Community Manager
Community Manager

Hi, VM. Ms. Laufenberg has agreed to share a presentation she's previously given in a more limited setting, and has provided the description from when she previously conducted the session. Hope you'll be able to join.

JParr
New Contributor II

This is a fantastic and incredibly timely topic. Honestly, it gets right to the heart of what we're trying to build with the Ohio Gemini AI Educators program. When I talk to teachers across the state, I see two reactions to AI. The first is fear—the worry that AI will become the ultimate "easy button," killing curiosity and critical thinking. The fear that students will just ask it for the answer and call it a day. And that's a valid concern if we don't change our approach. But the second reaction, the one that gets me excited, is the one this topic points to. What if, instead of an answer machine, we treat AI as an "inquiry engine"? I was working with a high school history teacher just last month who completely reframed how her students approach their research papers. Instead of having them ask the AI, "Write me an essay about the causes of the Dust Bowl," she had them start with a totally different kind of prompt. She had them ask, "You are a farmer in Oklahoma in 1934. Describe your life and your biggest challenges. Now, you are a government soil scientist from the same period. What are you observing and what are you recommending?" The difference was night and day. The students weren't getting answers; they were gathering perspectives. They were using the AI as a simulator to fuel their own questions and build a much deeper, more empathetic understanding of the topic. They were still the ones doing the thinking, the synthesizing, and the writing. The AI just became a powerful new partner in their inquiry.

That's the shift we have to make. It's less about the prompts we give the AI and more about the questions we teach our students to ask of the world. For me, this is the most exciting opportunity in education right now.

I'd love to know—what's one way you've seen a student's question change for the better when using a tool like Gemini?

I build AI on Google Cloud. It's like teaching rocks to think, but the rocks are distributed globally and bill by the second.