In this episode, Priten and Yanni Chen explore what it actually looks like to build AI tools that support learning rather than shortcut it. Yanni, a master's student at Harvard Graduate School of Education and product developer at Deep Brain Academy, shares her experience creating an AI math tutor with a genuine commitment to scaffolding, cultural inclusivity, and keeping teachers central to the learning process.
Key Takeaways:
- Scaffolding matters more than speed. AI tools often give direct answers because that's what they're engineered for. But real learning requires guiding students through the thinking process—something teachers do that AI cannot replicate. Educators should look for tools that provide step-by-step guidance rather than instant solutions.
- Teacher skepticism is healthy—and often fades with use. Most teachers approach AI with skepticism, which is appropriate. But just like PowerPoint and video once were new classroom tools, AI becomes less intimidating through hands-on experience. The recommendation: start with personal, low-stakes use before thinking about classroom implementation.
- Gen Alpha's AI fluency makes teacher presence more important, not less. Students are already fluent AI users. This doesn't diminish the teacher's role—it elevates it. Teachers need to help students navigate bias, develop critical thinking, and understand when AI is appropriate and when it isn't.
- We lack clear guidelines—so educators must set their own. In the absence of federal or state AI policies, individual educators need to establish clear ethical boundaries around data security, safety, and appropriate use. The technology is moving faster than regulation can keep up.
- Creative technologies extend beyond chatbots. From 3D printing and laser cutting that let students build physical objects to AR/VR simulations for medical training, there's a whole landscape of educational technology that emphasizes hands-on learning and creative exploration—not just AI conversation.
About Yanni Chen:
Yanni Chen is an Ed.M. candidate at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, where she studies Learning Design, Innovation, and Technology. She earned her B.S. from Boston University, majoring in Public Relations and minoring in Applied Human Development. Her work sits at the intersection of education, product management, AI, XR, and edtech. She focuses on student experience and the design of educational products that foster engagement, growth, and meaningful learning outcomes. Drawing from both her academic training and her work in edtech, Yanni brings the perspective of both a student and a product manager to conversations about teaching, learning, and educational innovation.