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contributed by Iryna Liusik, Early Childhood Educator — Linguistics & Emotional Development
Series note: This is Part 1 of a two-part series: Part 2 offers a one-minute classroom observation routine that helps teachers notice comfort that makes early expression visible before assumptions become records.
Introduction: In early childhood classrooms, the fastest mistake we make is treating silence as a single ‘thing.’ This piece offers a clearer interpretive lens for ‘quiet’ in multilingual learners — not to delay support, but to choose the right kind.
A Quiet Moment That Isn’t ‘Nothing’
During art time, a four-year-old holds a paintbrush but doesn’t paint.
She watches a peer mix colors, her hands tense around the brush. After a minute, her shoulders soften, her eyes follow the brush strokes on paper. She leans in just an inch and whispers a single word to the child beside her.
To many adults, this looks like ‘nothing happened.’ She’s still a ‘quiet child,’ but to an educator attuned to dual language learners (DLLs) and their development, that whisper and that shift in her body are something else entirely: the earliest visible steps of expression in a new language and a new environment.
Moments like these are easy to miss in busy classrooms where verbal participation is often treated as the primary indicator of learning. Yet for many multilingual children, expression begins long before full sentences appear.
It begins in posture, in breath, in proximity and gesture. And sometimes, in a single whispered word. The difference between ‘nothing happened’ and ‘something is starting’ is rarely a child problem; it is usually an adult perception problem. In busy classrooms, perception becomes practice — and practice becomes trajectory.
Why This Matters Now in U.S. Classrooms
In the United States, nearly one in three children under age five is growing up with more than one language, and…




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From Screen To World: 5 Ways To Use AI To Spark Hands-On Learning In K–12 Classrooms
contributed by Athena Stanley
Artificial Intelligence (AI) has the potential to be a powerful tool for student learning when paired with strong foundations in ethics, integrity, data privacy, bias awareness, and the ability to detect misinformation.
When used thoughtfully, AI can support brainstorming, revision, coaching, and feedback.
At the same time, many educators remain cautious. Concerns about overreliance, reduced critical thinking, academic dishonesty, and increased screen time are valid and worth addressing. Students need opportunities to interact face-to-face, engage with real-world contexts, and develop as whole learners beyond digital environments.
Yet reducing screen time does not require removing AI altogether.
In fact, AI is most powerful not when students remain on the screen, but when it launches them into real-world thinking, creating, and doing. The goal is not to keep students using AI, it is to use AI to move them beyond it.
Below are five practical, classroom-ready strategies that use AI as a launch point for hands-on, off-screen learning. The example prompts can be adapted by teachers to reflect their specific context, grade level, and learning goals.
1. Innovation Challenge
Provide students with a set of physical materials to explore individually or in groups. Students take a photo of the materials and ask AI to generate an innovation challenge based on what they see.
This approach encourages creativity, problem-solving, and experimentation. Prompts can be tailored to include specific learning objectives, such as forming a hypothesis, testing ideas, or presenting a final solution from the perspective of an inventor.
Example AI Prompt:
I am a [grade] student. I will upload a photo of materials I have. Based on these materials, create an innovation challenge for me.Include:
A clear goal
A requirement to... Sumber: Baca selengkapnya](https://jazuli-rahman.my.id/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/1776818021_Tulis-ulang-artikel-berikut-ke-dalam-bahasa-Indonesia-yang-rapi.png)










