🧠 AI in Elementary School

A Glimpse Into the Future of Learning

AI is changing everything—from how we work to how we communicate.

But here’s the twist: preparing children for an AI-powered future isn’t about rushing more technology into their hands. It’s about slowing down—helping them think deeply, ask sharper questions, and create with purpose and heart, so they can trust their own voice in a world filled with artificial ones.

Naturally, many parents are asking: What does this mean for my child’s education?

The answer has two parts:
🔹 What do children need to learn?
🔹 And just as importantly, how will they learn it?

Inside the WHPS Classroom: Preparing Students for an AI World

👇 This article offers a glimpse into what it’s really like to be a student at WHPS—and how we’re thoughtfully approaching AI (in its current form) across our classrooms. While our process is flexible and responsive, the four steps below capture how our teachers introduce nearly any new topic, including AI.

  • If your child has ever said, “That story didn’t really show how the character felt” or “That’s not a strong lead,” you’ve seen this step in action.

    At WHPS, students aren’t just told what makes strong writing or communication—they study it. Together, they explore real examples and break down what makes them clear, powerful, or emotionally true.

    Before students ever draft a story or design a project, they engage in shared inquiry:
    What makes something great? What makes it work?

    Teachers guide students in analyzing mentor texts—examples of strong writing from beloved authors—and invite them to think like writers:
    “What did the author do here that really works? How can I try something similar?”

    From these conversations, students and teachers co-create anchor charts—living documents that name the strategies, structures, and craft moves students can revisit throughout the year.

    This kind of analysis starts as early as TK. It helps every student build a deep understanding of quality—and the tools to achieve it in their own work.

    📌 Examples might include:

    • A chart showing ways to express nervousness (show, don’t tell), like:
      “My hands wouldn’t stay still.”
      “I looked down and didn’t answer.”
      “He scratched the back of his neck and laughed nervously.”

    • A persuasive writing chart with reminders:
      – “Use a clear call to action”
      – “Include a strong emotional example”
      – “Anticipate and address counterarguments”

    • A podcast prep chart with strategies like:
      – “Ask open-ended questions”
      – “Balance facts with personal stories”
      – “Speak clearly and with energy”

    📍 Parents: When you visit, take a moment to “read the room.” The anchor charts on the walls offer a powerful glimpse into how your child is learning to think and communicate with intention.

    📍 Where AI may show up in Step 1:

    • Teachers might compare AI-generated leads or summaries to mentor texts and ask: Which one works best, and why?

    • Students begin learning how to critique AI output against real examples of strong writing and communication.

  • Once students have analyzed examples and contributed to an anchor chart, teachers guide them into a mini-lesson—a short, focused 3–5 minute segment where students learn how to apply a specific strategy themselves.

    Teachers model the strategy live—writing, speaking, drawing, or problem-solving in front of the class while thinking aloud:
    “Hmm… this sentence is okay, but it feels flat. Let me try adding a bit of tension.”

    Then, students turn and talk with a partner to try the strategy themselves. This verbal rehearsal helps them process what they’ve just seen—and gives teachers immediate insight into:

    • Who understood the strategy

    • Whether the class is ready to try it independently

    • Which students might benefit from a follow-up group

    📌 In the classroom, this might look like:

    • Modeling different ways to structure a story lead—so students can experiment with openings that hook the reader and match the tone

    • Practicing how to revise a wordy sentence by choosing stronger verbs

    • Rehearsing how to open a podcast segment with an attention-grabbing line

    📍 Where AI may show up in Step 2:

    • Using AI to generate sample leads or title ideas—and inviting students to critique them

    • Comparing a teacher-written example to an AI version and discussing which one is clearer, more vivid, or more human

    • Asking AI for suggestions on how to show, not tell a specific emotion—and discussing which examples feel authentic, overdone, or worth revising

    Mini-lessons are a cornerstone of our teaching model. They help students connect the dots between noticing what works—and trying it out for themselves.

    In just a few minutes, students watch their teacher take a creative risk, revise in real time, and invite them to do the same. It’s one of the most joyful, empowering moments of the day.

  • With strategies in hand and anchor charts visible around the room, students move into action—drafting, building, recording, or revising. Teachers circulate and confer, prompting deeper thinking and nudging students toward meaningful revision.

    📌 You might hear a teacher ask:

    • “Does this sentence do the job you want it to do?”

    • “What else could you try to make this sound more like you?”

    • “How might your audience feel reading this part?”

    Students use anchor charts, mentor texts, checklists, and peer feedback to guide their choices. Some apply the strategy right away; others return to it across multiple drafts.

    💬 What is ‘voice’ in student writing?
    At WHPS, we help students find their voice—the unique tone, perspective, and personality that makes their writing unmistakably theirs. It’s how you know a piece belongs to that student—not just anyone.

    📌 In the classroom, this might look like:

    • A student flipping back to the “Ways to Show Emotion” chart while revising

    • A podcast team rehearsing a segment and revising for clarity and pacing

    • A teacher pulling a small group to the rug for a quick reteach based on what they noticed during the mini-lesson

    📍 Where AI may show up in Step 3:

    • A student uses AI to brainstorm alternate endings, then explains which ones feel true to their story

    • A student asks AI, “What are some ways to show a character is nervous without saying ‘nervous’?”—then compares the suggestions to the class anchor chart and revises accordingly

    • A student checks the clarity of a scientific explanation by comparing their paragraph to an AI-generated version

    Teachers support students in using AI as a brainstorming or revision tool—not a substitute for their thinking or voice.

    Our low student-to-teacher ratio—just 1:13 in Upper Elementary—makes this kind of responsive, individualized teaching possible. It gives teachers the time and space to notice who’s applying the strategy, who needs a boost, and who’s ready for a new challenge—right when it matters most.

  • At WHPS, work doesn’t end when a draft is complete. Students share their work, reflect on the process, and revise with intention. Teachers help them talk about their growth—what worked, what they changed, and why.

    Students learn to take pride in their effort and growth.
    They don’t just share what they made—they talk about how they made it, what changed along the way, and what they’d try differently next time.

    📌 In the classroom, this might look like:

    • A student presenting the lead they carefully crafted to hook the reader, reflecting on a rising action they’re still developing, or sharing how they fine-tuned their ending to make it more satisfying

    • Students walking around the room to give feedback on classmates’ podcast scripts or science projects

    • A reflection prompt like:
      – “What strategy did you try today?”
      – “What would you change next time?”
      – “What feedback helped you grow?”

    💬 “I looked at some AI-suggested closings for the story and one of my favorites from Kate DiCamillo, and that gave me inspiration for one in my own voice that I’m really happy with.” — WHPS Student

    📍 Where AI may show up in Step 4:

    • Students compare a version shaped with AI input to an earlier draft and reflect on what felt more authentic

    • A student explains why they chose to revise or reject an AI suggestion

    • Teachers prompt students to name which strategies—from anchor charts, mentor texts, or even AI examples—helped them improve their work

    🌀 Just like strong student work doesn’t happen in one draft, meaningful use of AI rarely happens in one prompt.
    As adults, many of us have learned that AI is an iterative tool—it works best when we know how to refine our thinking, follow up with more specific questions, and thoughtfully evaluate the responses we get.
    That’s exactly the mindset we want students to develop: not just using tools for answers, but engaging with them in a way that strengthens their thinking, voice, and independence.

  • At WHPS, our thoughtful approach to AI integration didn’t begin with the latest news cycle—it’s been unfolding intentionally over the past several years.

    Since the 2022–2023 school year, artificial intelligence has been a deliberate part of our Technology curriculum, with age-appropriate explorations that build both understanding and discernment.

    • In the early grades, students have interacted with digital tools that model how machines sort, match, and make predictions—laying the conceptual groundwork for understanding how AI systems “learn.”

    • In 2nd and 3rd grade, students have engaged in hands-on coding and problem-solving activities that demonstrate how training data influences outcomes—and how bias and accuracy are shaped by the inputs AI receives. They also reflected on the role of AI in supporting (but not replacing) original thinking.

    • By 4th and 5th grade, students are exploring more complex themes, including:

      • How to assess the trustworthiness of online sources

      • How to detect bias in AI-generated content

      • What it means to use AI tools ethically and responsibly

      • Why authorship, originality, and voice are essential in a world of generative technology

    Through these experiences, our students are developing more than just technical know-how—they're building real-world habits of critical thinking, digital discernment, and ethical engagement.

    As AI becomes increasingly embedded across industries and disciplines, this article is designed to help families understand what’s ahead. While these early tech-based introductions have laid a strong foundation, the next phase will involve more intentional crossover into core academic subjects, where students continue to apply, evaluate, and reflect on their learning across contexts.

  • If you're curious how skills in reading, writing, spelling, public speaking—and now AI—develop across grade levels, we’ve created parent-friendly snapshots to guide you.

    Our Literacy Skills Overview and Technology Skill Progression show how instruction is aligned from TK–8th grade, with many WHPS students reaching (and often exceeding) skills typically introduced as late as high school.

Why It Matters

The ability to think critically, communicate clearly, and harness tools like AI without losing your own voice is one of the most essential skillsets of our time.

At WHPS, students build that skillset every day—through a process that teaches them to deconstruct, model, try, revise, and reflect.

Because students don’t grow by copying formats or filling in blanks. They grow by revisiting ideas, refining their thinking, and learning to trust their own voice.

📌 In many schools, writing is taught through rigid templates or fill-in-the-blank formats.
📌 At WHPS, students learn to craft, revise, and reflect—using real tools, real strategies, and real thinking.

- This iterative, intentional process—naming strategies, testing ideas, making revisions—isn’t just how we teach writing.
- It’s how we teach everything: math, science, public speaking, art, and digital literacy.

And it’s precisely what prepares students not just to succeed in school, but to thrive in a world shaped by rapid change, growing complexity, and the thoughtful use of AI.

👇 What Might AI Look Like in TK–Fifth Grade?

These are gentle examples of how AI may be introduced—occasionally, with clear purpose and guidance—not as an everyday tool, but as part of a broader learning journey.

    • 🗣️ Teachers model how to ask AI a question, like: “What are some fun ways to describe a rainy day?”—then read the answers out loud and see which ones make the class smile or think

    • 🧠 Talking together about what sounds silly, surprising, or interesting—and asking, “Do we like that one? Can we come up with something even better?”

    • 🎨 Using AI to help come up with fun character names or settings for class stories—then letting students pick or build on the ideas

    • ✍️ During shared writing, the teacher might say, “Let’s see what the computer thinks… Hmm, what do you think—should we keep it or say it our own way?”

    • 💬 Encouraging students to share their voice, even in simple ways: “How would you say it?” “What would you add?”

    • 📖 Using AI as a vocabulary buddy—to get new words for “happy,” “big,” or “said”—then acting them out or drawing pictures to match

    • 💡 Using AI to get ideas for how to start a story—then picking the one that feels most exciting or “like me”

    • 😄 Asking AI fun questions like, “What are some ways to show a character is excited?”—and talking about which suggestions make sense

    • ✍️ Looking at two versions of a sentence (one student-written, one AI-generated) and discussing: “Which one sounds better? Why?”

    • 🎨 Trying out AI as a creativity partner—like asking for silly character names, settings, or fun facts

    • 🧠 Using AI to help build vocabulary (e.g., “What’s another word for ‘said’?”)

    • 💬 Practicing how to talk about their choices: “I liked this idea, but I changed it to sound more like me.”

    • 🤔 Beginning to notice that tools can help—but they don’t replace their own thinking or voice

    • 🧠 Using AI to brainstorm ideas for story leads, dialogue, or titles—and deciding which ones match their voice

    • ✍️ Comparing their own writing to an AI version and discussing what sounds stronger, clearer, or more personal

    • 💬 Asking AI to help “show, not tell” an emotion—then deciding which suggestions feel authentic or need revision

    • 🛠 Trying AI when they feel stuck—then using their judgment to revise, reject, or adapt suggestions

    • 🔍 Spotting patterns in AI output (e.g., vague words or overused phrases) and learning how to make their writing more specific and expressive

    • 🎯 Revising based on feedback from both AI and peers—then explaining what they changed and why

    • 🤔 Beginning conversations about authorship and ownership: “Which parts sound like you?” “What did you keep, and what did you change?”

    • 🧩 Learning to talk about tools and strategies—including when AI helped, when it didn’t, and what they learned from the process

    • 🧠 Exploring AI-generated ideas and deciding when to use, adapt, or reject them—developing discernment and ownership

    • ✍️ Writing reflections on whether and how AI improved a piece of work—and when it didn’t

    • 🗣 Debating when AI is helpful vs. when it might dull creativity or clarity

    • 🔍 Comparing multiple AI outputs to evaluate bias, accuracy, tone, and clarity

    • 🎯 Using AI to help clarify goals (e.g., generating possible questions for a podcast or audience-focused writing)

    • 🧩 Using AI as a brainstorming partner—then editing to make the voice distinctly their own

    • 🧭 Beginning age-appropriate conversations about ethical use of AI:
      – Who made this tool?
      – What information does it use?
      – How can I use it responsibly?

    • 🛠 Learning to “fact-check” AI outputs when using it for research or explanatory writing

    • 🧵 Analyzing AI’s tone and writing style—Does it sound human? Does it reflect what I want to say?

    • 🌱 Starting to understand “human-in-the-loop” collaboration—AI can help, but the thinking and decision-making are still theirs

🐾 The WHPS Perspective

If you’re a parent wondering how the school is approaching AI in the classroom, we hope this article offers a clear window into our thinking—while recognizing that AI is a dynamic, evolving, and exciting space.

We also hope it offers a deeper glimpse into the WHPS classroom—what it looks like, feels like, and means to be a student here.

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