In this episode, Priten speaks with Nate Otey, a ninth grade humanities, statistics, and calculus teacher at Boston Trinity Academy, a school that has deliberately chosen a low-tech approach. Nate shares how his school has banned phones for students up to 10th grade, with parents and students largely on board. The conversation explores what happens when a school community prioritizes relationality over connectivity, why friction in human relationships might be essential rather than something to eliminate, and how faith-based education can provide a framework for understanding why face-to-face connection matters. Nate reflects on the practical challenges of enforcing device policies, how teachers can use AI ethically while modeling integrity for students, and the coming wave of emotionally convincing AI that may challenge our understanding of human relationships.
Key Takeaways:
- Students often want the boundaries. Research shows many students know phones are bad for them and appreciate when schools take them away—they just can't opt out alone due to social pressure.
- Use the "would I tell my students?" heuristic. Teachers can ethically use AI for lesson prep and practice exercises, but should avoid using it for grading or tasks where students would feel cheated if they knew.
- Relationships require friction. Technology is designed to eliminate friction, but meaningful human connection is inherently awkward and difficult—that's what makes it valuable.
- Consistent enforcement matters more than strict rules. Students accept boundaries when they're applied fairly and uniformly; arbitrary enforcement breeds resentment.
- The next wave isn't intellectual—it's emotional. AI that perfectly imitates consciousness will soon challenge how we help students distinguish between real relationships and convincing simulations.
About Nate Otey:
Nate served as a Fellow in the Harvard Department of Philosophy for over five years, during which time he helped to found ThinkerAnalytix as Lead Instructor and later as COO, among other roles. Nate authored or co-authored many of the core ThinkerAnalytix curriculum and course offerings, including courses for HarvardX, HGSE, and LSAC. Nate currently teaches AP Statistics, AP Calculus AB, and 9th grade Humanities at Boston Trinity Academy in Hyde Park.