Rethinking Student Engagement with AI Tools

d4_core
New Contributor II

I’ve been exploring how Google for Education products, especially AI-powered tools in Workspace and Classroom, can make learning more interactive and personalized. Curious how other leaders are balancing innovation with responsibility—keeping students engaged without losing the human touch. Let’s share ideas, successes, and even the “oops” moments when tech didn’t go as planned.

Education can help you learn, but sometimes you may need time and experience thinking about your stories.
2 REPLIES 2

SavioFerraz
Contributor II

Hi, @d4_core

I've experienced this a lot in practice. I've used AI tools to support my classes and make learning more dynamic, but I've realized that technology only truly works when it connects with people, not when it replaces human contact.

I've seen students who barely participated become more engaged when they could create using digital resources, and that was very special. But I've also had days when the technology didn't work as planned… and in those moments, what made the class successful was the conversation, the listening, and the adaptation on the spot.

Today I always try to remember that AI is just a tool. What gives meaning to the experience are the people, the exchanges, and the educator's perspective during the process.

I'd also love to hear how you've been dealing with this in your daily lives.

Savio Ferraz

d4_core
New Contributor II

Hi @SavioFerraz,

Thank you for sharing this reflection—it really resonates with me.

I’ve also been exploring how AI and digital tools can make learning more engaging, especially for students who might not usually participate. It’s incredible to see creativity and confidence grow when students are given new ways to express their thinking.

At the same time, I completely agree that the most meaningful moments in education still come from human connection—the conversations, the listening, and the ability to adapt when things don’t go as planned. Technology can open doors, but it’s the educator’s presence and perspective that give the experience real value.

Lately, I’ve been trying to approach AI as a partner in the learning process rather than a replacement for it—something that supports curiosity, critical thinking, and collaboration while keeping relationships at the center.

I really appreciate you bringing this balance into the conversation.

Kai

Education can help you learn, but sometimes you may need time and experience thinking about your stories.