Communicating
Expectations
Designing an Effective AI Policy for Grades 6–12. Learn how to turn policy documents into a shared understanding through transparent, trust-centered communication with students and families.
Learning Outcomes
Explain why policy fails without clear stakeholder understanding.
Identify core messages for students and families (purpose, tools, privacy).
Embed AI expectations into syllabi and assignment directions.
Draft parent-friendly language and outline a communication plan.
“Even the best AI policy will fail if it lives only in a handbook. Families need to know why it matters and how they can support it at home.”
Clarity Builds Trust
Communication is not just about compliance—it’s about relationship-building. Your strategy should answer three essential questions:
What?
What do we expect from students regarding AI use?
Why?
Why do we have these specific rules and goals?
Where?
Where can families go if they are unsure or concerned?
Where Expectations Must Appear
| Communication Channel | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Student Handbook | Establishes foundational schoolwide expectations. |
| Course Syllabus | Connects school policy to specific course expectations. |
| Assignment Directions | Clarifies what is allowed for a specific learning task. |
| Family FAQ / Letter | Gives parents digestible, non-technical guidance. |
| Teacher Explanation | Reduces confusion at the exact point of use. |
Family-Facing Content
Families do not need a technical lecture. They need clear language about safety, learning, and support. Your communication should cover:
Visible at Point of Use
“Policy becomes real when students can see the expectation before they act—and when families can understand the approach without needing to decode technical language.”
Communication Scenarios
The Hidden Doc
A district posts its policy in a board packet and on a deep webpage. Families never receive a summary. Months later, parents are shocked to find AI use in some classes but not others.
Confusing Syllabus
A teacher writes “Use AI responsibly” on a syllabus. Students remain unsure if this means grammar help, brainstorming, or full drafting. The vague rule creates conflict.
The Parent Concern
A parent hears rumors of AI use and asks about data protection and cheating rules. The school has no proactive family guide, forcing a defensive, reactive response.
The Clear Rollout
A school launches with a family letter, student FAQ, and assignment labels. Teachers use a common slide deck. Consistency and trust are built from day one.
Outline Your Communication Plan
How will students and families clearly understand AI expectations at your school? In 3–5 sentences, identify at least two communication channels and explain how you will keep the message consistent.