Why Students Should Solve Real-World Problems, Not Just Learn About AI | Ep. 96
Fri Feb 06 2026
In this episode of ChatEDU (Why Students Should Solve Real-World Problems, Not Just Learn About AI), Matt and Liz open with two weird AI stories that set the tone for a wide-ranging conversation about safety, policy, and purpose. From there, they move quickly through the week’s biggest headlines before closing with a powerful interview on why real-world problem solving is the most durable form of AI literacy.
The Run Down
A bipartisan Senate hearing raises alarms about student screen time, AI tools, and online safety. Lawmakers focus less on innovation and more on developmental impact, signaling a shift toward regulation and accountability in edtech.
New court documents suggest Meta leadership was aware of risks tied to sexualized chatbot interactions with minors. Matt and Liz connect the story to growing political backlash and questions of corporate responsibility.
Houston ISD announces new K–8 schools centered on AI, design thinking, accelerated learning, and whole-child development. Music, community service, and leadership skills are built into the model, though details are still emerging.
The UK government plans to provide AI tutoring support to up to 450,000 disadvantaged students by 2027. Designed with teachers, the tools aim to supplement classroom instruction and expand access to one-to-one support.
Denver Public Schools blocks student access to ChatGPT over safety and privacy concerns. Approved AI tools with stricter safeguards remain allowed, highlighting the rise of district-level AI governance.
A BBC analysis explores why people increasingly turn to chatbots for emotional support. Research suggests AI often appears more attentive and compassionate than humans, raising questions about listening, attention, and connection.
Beneath the Surface
Matt speaks with Tara Chklovski, founder and CEO of Technovation, about why students learn AI best by solving real problems in their communities. Tara shares decades of evidence showing that project-based learning builds confidence, purpose, and true AI literacy. The conversation highlights Technovation’s free AI in Action curriculum and the power of mentorship and courage.
Bright Byte: AI as a Scientific Collaborator
OpenAI reports that over one million weekly users now use ChatGPT for advanced math and science research. From proofs to data analysis, AI is accelerating discovery across scientific fields.
Announcements
Celebrate our 100th episode: skills21.org/chatedu100
Learning They'll Love - Dr. Elizabeth Radday
ASCD: https://tinyurl.com/bde652nn
Amazon: https://tinyurl.com/22t9hz77
Barnes and Noble: https://tinyurl.com/bdckf6zw
EdAdvance is offering a Middle and High School Student AI Literacy course — email chatedu@edadvance.org to bring it to your district. www.skills21.org/ai/learnai
Skills21’s FREE social media literacy course. Check it out here - https://www.skills21.org/social-balance
This episode is sponsored by The National Center for Next Generation Manufacturing. https://www.nextgenmfg.org
Links
Technovation
https://www.technovation.org/
AI in Action Curriculum | Technovation
https://www.technovation.org/ai-in-action/
Alaska Student Arrested for Eating an AI Art
https://tinyurl.com/3nbsf38x
How an AI Schoolgirl Became a Far-Right Star
https://tinyurl.com/2rwc24xe
Senate’s Youth Tech Hearing: Signals for Education, Edtech, and AI Policy
https://tinyurl.com/54smc83d
Zuckerberg Rejected Teen AI “Off” Switch, Lawsuit Says
https://tinyurl.com/9jt85kym
HISD to Pilot AI-Focused K–8 Schools
https://tinyurl.com/4kau6rdb
AI Tools Could Help 450,000 Disadvantaged Pupils
https://tinyurl.com/fpw4mxsf
Colorado’s largest school district bans ChatGPT for students
https://tinyurl.com/bdfw8b9s
What AI can teach us about listening better
https://tinyurl.com/bdcez369
AI as a Scientific Collaborator
https://tinyurl.com/4pu6xyz8
More
In this episode of ChatEDU (Why Students Should Solve Real-World Problems, Not Just Learn About AI), Matt and Liz open with two weird AI stories that set the tone for a wide-ranging conversation about safety, policy, and purpose. From there, they move quickly through the week’s biggest headlines before closing with a powerful interview on why real-world problem solving is the most durable form of AI literacy. The Run Down A bipartisan Senate hearing raises alarms about student screen time, AI tools, and online safety. Lawmakers focus less on innovation and more on developmental impact, signaling a shift toward regulation and accountability in edtech. New court documents suggest Meta leadership was aware of risks tied to sexualized chatbot interactions with minors. Matt and Liz connect the story to growing political backlash and questions of corporate responsibility. Houston ISD announces new K–8 schools centered on AI, design thinking, accelerated learning, and whole-child development. Music, community service, and leadership skills are built into the model, though details are still emerging. The UK government plans to provide AI tutoring support to up to 450,000 disadvantaged students by 2027. Designed with teachers, the tools aim to supplement classroom instruction and expand access to one-to-one support. Denver Public Schools blocks student access to ChatGPT over safety and privacy concerns. Approved AI tools with stricter safeguards remain allowed, highlighting the rise of district-level AI governance. A BBC analysis explores why people increasingly turn to chatbots for emotional support. Research suggests AI often appears more attentive and compassionate than humans, raising questions about listening, attention, and connection. Beneath the Surface Matt speaks with Tara Chklovski, founder and CEO of Technovation, about why students learn AI best by solving real problems in their communities. Tara shares decades of evidence showing that project-based learning builds confidence, purpose, and true AI literacy. The conversation highlights Technovation’s free AI in Action curriculum and the power of mentorship and courage. Bright Byte: AI as a Scientific Collaborator OpenAI reports that over one million weekly users now use ChatGPT for advanced math and science research. From proofs to data analysis, AI is accelerating discovery across scientific fields. Announcements Celebrate our 100th episode: skills21.org/chatedu100 Learning They'll Love - Dr. Elizabeth Radday ASCD: https://tinyurl.com/bde652nn Amazon: https://tinyurl.com/22t9hz77 Barnes and Noble: https://tinyurl.com/bdckf6zw EdAdvance is offering a Middle and High School Student AI Literacy course — email chatedu@edadvance.org to bring it to your district. www.skills21.org/ai/learnai Skills21’s FREE social media literacy course. Check it out here - https://www.skills21.org/social-balance This episode is sponsored by The National Center for Next Generation Manufacturing. https://www.nextgenmfg.org Links Technovation https://www.technovation.org/ AI in Action Curriculum | Technovation https://www.technovation.org/ai-in-action/ Alaska Student Arrested for Eating an AI Art https://tinyurl.com/3nbsf38x How an AI Schoolgirl Became a Far-Right Star https://tinyurl.com/2rwc24xe Senate’s Youth Tech Hearing: Signals for Education, Edtech, and AI Policy https://tinyurl.com/54smc83d Zuckerberg Rejected Teen AI “Off” Switch, Lawsuit Says https://tinyurl.com/9jt85kym HISD to Pilot AI-Focused K–8 Schools https://tinyurl.com/4kau6rdb AI Tools Could Help 450,000 Disadvantaged Pupils https://tinyurl.com/fpw4mxsf Colorado’s largest school district bans ChatGPT for students https://tinyurl.com/bdfw8b9s What AI can teach us about listening better https://tinyurl.com/bdcez369 AI as a Scientific Collaborator https://tinyurl.com/4pu6xyz8