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Homeschoolers embrace AI, even as many teachers are wary

Once you persuade parents and kids to use AI, “There’s nobody else you have to convince.”

Homeschoolers embrace AI, even as many teachers are wary
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By
GREG TOPPO
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29 June 2024
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Like many parents who homeschool their children, Jolene Fender helps organize book clubs, inviting students in her Cary, N.C., co-op to meet for monthly discussions.

But over the years, parents have struggled to find good opening questions. 

“You’d search [the Internet], you’d go on Pinterest,” she said. “A lot of the work had to be done manually, or you had to do a lot more digging around.”


Then came ChatGPT, Open AI’s widely used artificial intelligence bot. For Fender, it was a no-brainer to query it for help developing deep opening questions.

The chatbot and other AI tools like it have found an eager audience among homeschoolers and microschoolers, with parents and teachers readily embracing it as a brainstorming and management tool, even as public schools take a more cautious approach, often banning it outright. 


A few observers say AI may even make homeschooling more practical, opening it up to busy parents who might have balked previously.

“Homeschoolers have always been unconstrained in their ability to combine technology — any kind of tech,” said Alex Sarlin, a longtime technology analyst and co-host of the EdTech Insiders podcast. 


The reasons are readily apparent, he said: Home internet service typically doesn’t block key websites the way most schools do. Families can more easily manage data privacy and get the digital tools they want without fuss. They’re basically able to ignore “all the dozen reasons why everything falls apart when you try to sell to schools,” Sarlin said. 

Persuading homeschoolers to try out new things is also a lot simpler: If a student and parents like a tool, “There’s nobody else you have to convince.”

Indeed, a September survey by the curriculum vendor Age of Learning found that 44% of homeschool educators reported using ChatGPT, compared to 34% of classroom educators.


“Not everyone is using it, but some are very excited about it,” said Amir Nathoo, co-founder of Outschool, an online education platform.

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