At HomeAmanda Vaden
An illustration depicting AI literacy in education.

This article first appeared on mommyfactor.com as a contributed piece by Sphero.

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is no longer just science fiction. It's here, and it's changing how your kids learn. From personalized learning tools to hands-on coding experiences, AI is becoming a regular part of the classroom in exciting, practical ways.

But as a parent, you might wonder: What does this mean for their futures? And how can you help them thrive in a world where AI is the norm?

Let's explore how AI impacts STEM education, why human skills still matter, and how you can support your learners through this pivotal shift.

How AI Supports STEM Learning

AI transforms education to benefit your kids, especially in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM). Here's how:

1. Personalized Learning

Imagine a tutor who never gets tired and adapts to your kid's needs. That's what AI-powered platforms like DreamBox do – adjust content in real time to focus on the areas where your kids need the most help. Whether your learners are breezing through variables or stuck on coding loops, AI tools tailor lessons for a more engaging and practical experience.

2. Instant Feedback and On-Demand Help

AI tools can grade assignments and provide feedback in seconds. This gives students immediate insight into their work and helps them improve faster. Tools like ChatGPT can also act as study buddies, offering explanations or brainstorming help even after school hours.

3. Real-World Tech Exposure

Today's students aren't just learning theory — they're using AI to solve real problems. From building voice-command apps to analyzing data with machine learning, these hands-on projects prepare them for a tech-driven future.

What AI Can't Do (and Why It Matters)

While AI is a powerful tool, it can't do everything. There are key areas where learners need to build human skills and where your support matters most.

1. Creativity and Critical Thinking

AI can generate content and suggest solutions, but it can't develop new ideas or think creatively. Your kids’ ideas, logic, and curiosity drive real innovation, and AI needs those human traits to be truly useful.

2. Human Connection

A great teacher doesn't just deliver facts; they inspire. AI might explain a coding concept, but it can't sense when students are frustrated or spark their curiosity the way a mentor or parent can.

3. Foundational Skills Still Matter

You might ask: "If AI can write code, do my kids still need to learn it?" The answer is yes. 

Without understanding how coding works, they won't be able to guide or correct AI when it makes mistakes (which it often does). Think of AI as an intelligent assistant, not a replacement.

What You Can Do as a Parent

You don't need to be a tech expert to support your learners’ interest in AI and STEM. Here are four practical ways to help:

Encourage STEM Exploration

Try coding camps, AI challenges, or hands-on tools like Sphero robots. Platforms like Scratch make programming fun and approachable, even for beginners.

Talk About Tech Ethics

AI raises important questions about fairness, privacy, and bias. Discussing how AI makes decisions helps kids think critically and build media literacy skills.

Combine Creativity with Coding

Help your learners pair imagination with technology. Whether designing art with AI tools like DALL·E or writing stories with AI assistants, they learn to create, not just consume.

Celebrate Mistakes

Trial and error is part of learning. If your kids get stuck or frustrated, remind them that every bug or failed attempt is a step toward success.

Making AI Concepts Click with the Right Tools 

One of the most engaging ways to introduce your learners to AI and computer science is through hands-on tools like Sphero BOLT+. This interactive robot blends learning with play, allowing kids to program real-world actions and see results instantly.

Using the Sphero Edu App, kids can start with simple drag-and-drop coding and gradually explore more advanced concepts like text coding, sensors, and automation. They can even design programs where BOLT+ lights up in patterns, follows custom paths, or reacts to commands, building foundational AI and programming skills.

In this AI-focused lesson, BOLT Meets ChatGPT, students learn how AI chatbots like ChatGPT work, work to modify a JavaScript program to make BOLT/BOLT+ introduce itself, and discuss the advantages and disadvantages of AI chatbots. This real-life "debugging" lesson allows them to question and iterate on what ChatGPT provided, teaching them to navigate the nuances and complexities of programming with an AI tool. 

What's more, tools like BOLT+ foster teamwork and resilience. When kids collaborate to solve problems, debug code, and refine their designs, they learn more than just tech, building confidence, communication, and creativity.

The Big Picture: AI + Human Imagination

AI isn't replacing computer science; it's enhancing it. The learners who will thrive in tomorrow's world are the ones who know how to work with AI, not just use it. That means teaching them to code, think critically, and stay curious.

As a parent, your encouragement matters more than ever. You don't need to know how to build an algorithm to support your kids’ tech journey; you just need to help them ask questions, try new things, and believe in their ability.

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