107.5FM WCCN The Rock - The Coolest Station in the Nation
ESPN 92.3FM WOSQ
92.7FM WPKG
Memories 1370AM 98.5FM
98.7FM / 1450AM WDLB - Timeless Classics
Listen Live: 107.5 THE ROCK92.7 FM
Family owned radio stations serving all of Central Wisconsin

Wisconsin Teachers Working Through AI in the Classroom

Thursday, July 31st, 2025 -- 9:01 AM

ai-generated-8061342_6400.jpg

(Lorin Cox, Wisconsin Public Radio) Wisconsin teachers are working through how to implement and manage artificial intelligence for themselves and their students, but the challenge of adapting to new technology in the classroom is not new.

According to Lorin Cox with Wisconsin Public Radio, Darlington Elementary/Middle School science teacher Mark Acherman has been teaching for more than 30 years and has seen how computers, the internet and smart phones have become widespread in schools.

To him, AI is just the next technological iteration. “As a teacher, technology has always allowed me to become more creative and a more engaging teacher,” Acherman told WPR’s “Wisconsin Today.”

“We have to figure out how we can incorporate (AI) while still doing so many of the other things that are important for students to learn.” He’s embracing the technology for his classroom, using an AI tool called Curipod to make his lesson plans more interactive for his fifth- and sixth-grade students.

Acherman said when students submit responses for questions in the app, they can vote on who had the best answer, which pushes them to be more creative. It also analyzes their written work and suggests areas for improvement.

His innovation and creativity is part of why he was named one of five Wisconsin Teachers of the Year for 2026 by the state Department of Public Instruction. Another recent Teacher of the Year honoree is taking a similar, open-minded approach to AI in the classroom.

Brian Counselman teaches science at Malcolm Shabazz City High School, an alternative school in Madison focused on project-based learning. He told WPR that he sees students being motivated by technology, and teachers can find more success leaning into that rather than avoiding it.

“When you look at things like homework or assignments, I think it challenges teachers in a really healthy way,” Counselman said. “That’s often finding those real, authentic moments where students are really digging into and experiencing things real time, working with people face to face.”

A Teacher of the Year winner for 2025, Counselman said the emphasis is on advancing students’ “depth of knowledge,” progressing from the basic memorization of a fact to understanding how an idea works, why it is the way it is and how else it can be applied.

A lot of that comes by assessing students through their self-reflections and synthesizing the concepts they’re learning by applying it to their own personal experiences.

“Sure, you can look something up, you can look up a fact,” Counselman said. “But what the AI tool can’t do is reflect on how you engaged with an experience in or outside of class.”

Both teachers are trying to strike a balance between taking advantage of the benefits AI can provide while emphasizing the value of the real life experiences it can’t replace.


Feel free to contact us with questions and/or comments.