Designing for
Learning Impact
Designing an Effective AI Policy for Grades 6–12. Rethinking assignments to ensure AI augments thinking rather than bypassing the cognitive struggle essential for learning.
Learning Outcomes
Explain how AI changes student workload and depth of learning.
Recognize AI use that augments vs. bypasses core cognitive work.
Identify assignment features like process evidence and oral defense.
Draft policy language regarding assignment design for learning impact.
“AI does not just change how quickly students can finish work. It changes what parts of the work they skip, what they deepen, and what we must redesign.”
AI and the Cognitive Shift
AI can significantly reduce time spent on brainstorming, drafting, or checking answers. While this lowers unnecessary friction, it can also remove the struggle and rehearsal that lead to durable learning.
Augmenting vs. Bypassing Learning
Augments Learning When…
- Students use it to clarify concepts and test understanding.
- It functions as a scaffold for brainstorming and iteration.
- Students remain intellectually engaged in the revision process.
Bypasses Learning When…
- It generates final answers without student understanding.
- It replaces the core reading, analysis, or drafting work entirely.
- Students skip the reasoning process to produce polished work.
Visible Thinking Strategies
“The goal is not to outsmart AI at every turn. The goal is to make student thinking more visible.”
Rethinking Workload
If students can generate a draft in minutes, what should the assignment emphasize? Schools may need to reconsider:
What stays relevant:
- • Developing a unique voice
- • Formulating complex arguments
- • Cross-referencing and transfer
What needs shifting:
- • Basic summary tasks
- • Generic factual recall
- • Single-draft production
Design Impact Scenarios
Product vs. Learning
A student uses AI to generate a polished essay in minutes. While the draft looks strong, they cannot explain their reasoning or revise without the tool’s help.
Augmented Thinking
A student uses AI to clarify a science concept and test their understanding before writing a reflection. The final work reflects genuine mastery gained through the tool.
The Unchanged Task
A teacher continues assigning generic summaries that AI completes instantly. The teacher becomes frustrated by the “sameness” of the resulting work.
Process-Based Model
A department redesigns research so students submit inquiry logs and defend conclusions in short conferences. Student reasoning remains visible throughout.
Address Learning Impact
How might AI change the workload and expectations in your school? In 3–5 sentences, describe at least one implication for assignment or assessment design that preserves meaningful thinking.