AI Tools for Literacy
This week I decided to look into some AI tools that teachers can use to support literacy education in their classrooms. MagicSchool.ai stood out to me right away.
It is a generative AI platform created by educators for educators. It has many useful tools that teachers can use to take some of the many repetitive tasks off their plate.
MagicSchool.ai has a long list of AI tools (Magic Tools) educators can use to support their teaching. Similar to the popular AI platform, ChatGPT, it has a Custom Chatbot to interact with based on a criteria that you choose. You can use this feature to ask questions relevant to teaching such as, “What is the best way to get the attention of your students?”
It also has an AI generator for lesson plans, report card comments, real world connections, sentence starters, teacher observations, and many, many more. It can be used as a tool for brainstorming, planning, and reflecting. Used appropriately, MagicSchool.ai can be an extremely useful resource for educators of all grades and subjects.
One of the features I was excited to explore was MagicSchool.ai’s Multiple Explanations tool. This tool is meant to “generate clear explanations of concepts that you’re teaching in class to help student understanding.” My experiences in teaching have taught me how important it is to provide different ways for students to interact with concepts, and make sure you provide multiple ways for students to understand a new concept.
This tool gives teachers different ideas for explaining concepts, catering to the different learning styles and needs of students. I thought about how this could support literacy education in different grade levels, and decided to try it out on a grade 7 English Language Arts concept: figurative language. The Multiple Explanations tool generated an explanation for different types of figurative language, as well as a number of examples.
I wanted to narrow my search down to get more specific answers. In the BC Curriculum, students are expected to learn how to recognize and use different literary devices, such as imagery, metaphors, and similies. The next prompt I gave the generator was “How can I teach similies effectively in the classroom?” It started listing out different ways to introduce similies to a grade 7 class.
The Multiple Explanations tool on MagicSchool.ai makes sure that educators have clear instructions and effective strategies to introduce concepts to their classes. When focusing on a specific need, such as teaching similes to a Grade 7 class, it provides different ways for teachers to meet the diverse learning needs of their students.