Most educators need just enough AI skill: write prompts, evaluate output, and integrate AI into workflows. Deep technical knowledge is optional.
An AI trend matters if it affects your content creation, student communication, or learning delivery. Ignore everything else.
Community learning groups, short YouTube tutorials, and the AI tools themselves are the best resources for non-technical educators.
Yes — ask ChatGPT or Claude to teach you how to use it. AI is one of the best tutors for learning AI tools efficiently.
Experienced educators rely on their community to surface important AI changes instead of tracking everything themselves.
Give any new AI tool 30 minutes and three real tasks. If it saves time on two of them, keep it. If not, move on.
Learn AI by using it on real business tasks. Every email, lesson, or post you create with AI is both productive work and training.
Successful AI educators use AI daily, save their best prompts, and always edit output before publishing. Consistency beats intensity.
Spend 30 minutes once a week on AI learning. One newsletter, one test, one community is enough to stay ahead.
Think like an experimenter, not an expert. You only need to track AI changes that directly affect your teaching workflow.