Your Child is Using AI for Homework. Is That a Problem?
AI homework tools are in every student's pocket. The real question isn't whether they're using them — it's whether they're learning anything while they do.
Teacherz Blog
Education trends, parenting insights, student success, and the future of learning.
Five years after the National Education Policy was announced, we look at what has genuinely changed in classrooms, what hasn't, and what parents should be asking their schools right now.
AI homework tools are in every student's pocket. The real question isn't whether they're using them — it's whether they're learning anything while they do.
Over 1.2 million teacher vacancies. A third of schools without a science teacher. Mathematics taught by teachers who never studied it. The data is stark, and the consequences are already in classrooms.
Pass rates are up, toppers are everywhere, and the news looks good. But what do CBSE board results actually measure — and what don't they tell you about your child's future?
The debate about children and screens has been loud and mostly unhelpful. The research is more nuanced, more interesting, and more actionable than 'screens are bad'.
The obsessive focus on JEE and NEET has left millions of students unaware of equally valuable pathways. Here are the alternatives that genuinely work — with data on outcomes.
Finland's education system consistently produces the best outcomes in the world. But the lessons for India are more nuanced than 'give students less homework'.
NIMHANS data shows 1 in 4 Indian students aged 13–17 reports clinically significant anxiety. Academic pressure is a major factor — but it is not the only one, and it is not the whole story.
Post-pandemic, a growing number of Indian families have chosen not to return their children to traditional school. The data on who they are and how their children are faring is surprising.
CBSE introduced coding and computational thinking for Classes 6–8 in 2021. Four years later, a gap has opened between what the curriculum says and what students can actually do.