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In this episode, I talk about the growing shift toward automation and why that raises an important question for us as educators—what still requires human judgment? While automation can make things faster and more efficient, teaching has never been about autopilot.
I’ve been thinking about how teaching is really constant decision-making. We adjust in real time based on what we see, hear, and feel in the classroom. Students are not predictable, and they don’t fit into clean systems, which means they need human responses—not automated ones.
I also get into how context matters in every moment. The decisions we make—when to push, when to pause, when to check in—those are based on experience and awareness. That kind of judgment is built over time, and it cannot be automated.
At the end of the day, automation can handle tasks, but it cannot replace judgment. Our role is to protect that human side of teaching, to stay responsive, and to make decisions that truly serve the students in front of us.
Show Notes
By Mr Funky Teacher Nicholas KleveIn this episode, I talk about the growing shift toward automation and why that raises an important question for us as educators—what still requires human judgment? While automation can make things faster and more efficient, teaching has never been about autopilot.
I’ve been thinking about how teaching is really constant decision-making. We adjust in real time based on what we see, hear, and feel in the classroom. Students are not predictable, and they don’t fit into clean systems, which means they need human responses—not automated ones.
I also get into how context matters in every moment. The decisions we make—when to push, when to pause, when to check in—those are based on experience and awareness. That kind of judgment is built over time, and it cannot be automated.
At the end of the day, automation can handle tasks, but it cannot replace judgment. Our role is to protect that human side of teaching, to stay responsive, and to make decisions that truly serve the students in front of us.
Show Notes