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In the second week of January, a senior mathematics teacher with 22 years in the classroom raised a hand at the end of a staff meeting and asked a question that changed the way I now design AI literacy work for entire faculties.
Her question was not about prompts or platforms. It was simpler and more honest than that: “What if I look stupid in front of my students?” The room went quiet. Nobody had said it out loud before, but every teacher present had been carrying some version of the same worry for months. American districts trying to land a shared AI structure are spending too much time on tooling and too little on the question that actually drives teacher uptake.
Over two years, I worked closely with around 50 K-12 colleagues across three international schools in São Paulo on AI literacy. The dominant barrier to adoption was not technophobia, not generational gap, not fear of replacement. It was a more specific worry. Experienced teachers were afraid of being seen by their students as the last person in the room to understand a tool the students were already using. Naming that barrier in a faculty meeting, and giving teachers explicit institutional permission to learn alongside their students, accelerated uptake sharply at around the eight-month mark. American district leaders can replicate this language shift at zero marginal cost, and they should do it before signing a single new procurement contract.
The first decision a district has to make is about the unit of engagement. Whole-school AI professional development days produced low durable change in our cohort. Teachers showed up, took notes, and went back to their classrooms with little behavioral shift visible six weeks later. Self-directed learning produced uneven change concentrated among already-willing teachers, which widened rather than closed the internal gap. The strongest behavioral signal came from department-level structured engagement, in groups of four to eight teachers, across four sessions over six weeks, with one practice task between meetings and one shared observation at the end. The template a district can adapt is simple. Forty-five minutes per session. One specific pedagogical question per session, not one tool per session. One practice task each teacher takes into a real lesson the following week. One shared observation at the final session, written up in two paragraphs and circulated to the rest of the faculty. We did not start with the departments that initially resisted, but instead started with two willing departments, published a short internal write-up of what changed, and let the resistant departments approach us when they were ready. That sequencing matters more than the content.
The second decision is about how the district frames AI use itself. The most damaging framing in current U.S. K-12 policy is the binary one. Did the student use AI or did they not? That binary cannot survive contact with a real classroom. A mathematics student using AI to check work before submission is doing something different from a student using AI to bypass the work entirely. A history student using AI to summarize a primary source is doing something different from a student using AI to substitute one. The framework that worked in our cohort treated AI use as a competence within a discipline, with observable criteria specific to that subject. The drafting time is shorter than most district leaders expect. One paragraph per discipline, three to five observable criteria, written by the head of department and signed off by the principal in around 90 minutes. The statement should be in language a 14-year-old can read, not in language a lawyer drafted. When students can read the criteria, they self-regulate against them. When students cannot read the criteria, they cheat against them.
The third decision is about sequencing. Most districts begin with tooling. They evaluate three platforms, pick one, roll it out, and then wonder why teacher uptake is uneven six months later. The order that worked for us was the reverse. Begin with the language the leader uses about AI in faculty meetings. Move to the structure of department-level engagement. Move to discipline-specific competence statements. Only then choose a platform, and choose it with the heads of department who will actually use it, not with an IT committee deciding in their absence. A district that gets the language, the structure, and the competence statements right will get a return on whatever platform it picks. A district that gets the platform right but the other three wrong will get the budget line and not the behavior change.
What does the district leader do this week, without waiting for the next budget cycle? Change the language about AI in the next faculty meeting from “we will permit it under the following conditions” to “we will learn it alongside our students, and here is what that looks like.” Propose to two department heads a four-session structured engagement with measurement at the end, and offer to attend the first session yourself. Ask one of those heads to draft a single discipline-specific AI competence statement, in plain language, as a template for the rest of the faculty.
None of this requires money the district does not already have. What it requires is the leader changing the language they use in faculty meetings, being honest about which budget lines have produced behavioral change and which have not, and accepting that AI literacy in a district is not a procurement project. It is a language project, a structure project, and a competence project, in that order, and it costs nothing to begin tomorrow.
Roney Lima do Nascimento, University of São PauloRoney Lima do Nascimento is a doctoral candidate in Pure Mathematics at the University of São Paulo (IME-USP) and an IB Diploma Mathematics teacher at Colégio São Luís in São Paulo. Microsoft Innovative Educator Expert 2026, Google Generative AI Leader (valid through 2028). Author of ‘Generative AI for Teachers’. Featured in the April 2026 ISTE+ASCD Blog and the May 2026 print issue of Educational Leadership. Confirmed keynote speaker at ICAILY 2026 in Cape Town in September. Latest posts by eSchool Media Contributors (see all)
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