Giving Compass' Take:
- Jessie Gómez discusses how a program called The Summit is preparing high school students for the role of AI tools in their future careers.
- How can donors and funders support the implementation of career development programs for students that address the current state of the job market and the use of AI tools?
- Learn more about key issues in education and how you can help.
- Search our Guide to Good for nonprofits focused on education in your area.
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On a recent Thursday morning, Michael Taubman, who is preparing high school students for the job market, asked his class of seniors at North Star Academy’s Washington Park High School: “What do you think AI’s role should be in your future career?”
“In school, like how we use AI as a tool and we don’t use it to cheat on our work … that’s how it should be, like an assistant,” said Amirah Falana, a 17-year-old interested in a career in real estate law.
Fernando Infante, an aspiring software developer, agreed that AI should be a tool to “provide suggestions” and inform the work.
“It’s like having AI as a partner rather than it doing the work,” said Infante during class.
Falana and Infante are students in Taubman’s class called The Summit, a yearlong program offered to 93 seniors this year and expanding to juniors next year that also includes a 10-week AI course developed by Taubman and Stanford University.
As part of the course, students use artificial intelligence tools – often viewed in a negative light due to privacy and other technical concerns – to explore their career interests and better understand how technology could shape the workforce. The class is also timely, as 92% of companies plan to invest in more AI over the next three years, according to a report by global consulting firm McKinsey and Company.
The lessons provide students with hands-on exercises to better understand how AI works and how they can use it in their daily lives. They are also designed so teachers across subject areas can include them as part of their courses and help high school students earn a Google Career Certificate for AI Essentials, which introduces AI and teaches the basics of using AI tools.
Students like Infante have used the AI and coding skills they learned in class to create their own apps while others have used them to create school surveys and spark new thoughts about their future careers. Taubman says the goal is to also give students agency over AI so they can embrace technological changes and remain competitive in the workfield.
Read the full article about preparing students for AI by Jessie Gómez at Chalkbeat.