Why Your Edtech Is Failing Students (And What to Do Instead) with Kris Rockwell cover art

Why Your Edtech Is Failing Students (And What to Do Instead) with Kris Rockwell

Why Your Edtech Is Failing Students (And What to Do Instead) with Kris Rockwell

Listen for free

View show details
A researcher, Edtech expert, and PhD candidate studying the intersection of AI, learning, and human experience, Kris brings a rare combination of academic rigor and real-world application to the question every principal is quietly asking: is all this technology actually helping? His work with Play Piper puts him at the front lines of how kids interact with screens — and what happens when that interaction goes wrong. Kris has been studying and speaking about screen usage in learning environments since 2013, long before most districts had a policy on the subject. AI policy still doesn't exist in most school districts in 2026. Meta and YouTube just lost a major court case over intentionally building products harmful to kids. And the principals who bought Edtech tools during COVID are still living with implementations they never had time to design properly. Kris returns to the RuckusCast to name the problem clearly: technology in schools is being treated as the experience instead of a tool within the experience — and that distinction is costing students more than anyone wants to admit. 🎯 What You'll Learn Why the Meta and YouTube court ruling matters to every principal making Edtech decisions right nowThe critical difference between simulation-based learning and actual skill developmentHow COVID forced impossible implementation timelines that are still warping Edtech use todayWhy most districts still have no AI policy in 2026 — and what to do about itHow to think about AI as a co-principal rather than a threat or a shortcut 🔨 Breaking Down the Old Rules 🧰 Key Insight #1: Edtech Adoption Without Design Produces Screen Dependency, Not Learning What's broken: Schools are purchasing and deploying Edtech based on what's new and available, not on what produces better outcomes — and the result is students staring at screens for the majority of their learning time.The shift: Technology should be a tool within the learning experience, not the experience itself — the screen is one element of the world, not a replacement for it.Impact: When principals reframe adoption decisions around this distinction, they stop chasing shiny tools and start evaluating whether an implementation actually extends beyond what kids are staring at. 🧰 Key Insight #2: COVID-Era Implementation Timelines Broke Edtech Design What's broken: Transitioning a course from in-person to online properly takes months — sometimes a year — but COVID forced schools to make that shift in three to four weeks, and those broken implementations carried through.The shift: Acknowledge that what most schools are running isn't intentional digital learning design — it's emergency triage that never got fixed.Impact: Principals who name this legacy honestly can audit their current edtech stack against what was designed with intention versus what was deployed in crisis mode. 🧠 Key Insight #3: AI Is a Tool for Handling the Curriculum — Not for Replacing the Human Leader What's broken: Principals are either avoiding AI entirely or offloading judgment to it — neither approach produces better schools.The shift: Let AI handle the curriculum structure, the data, the content scaffolding — and use the human leader for exactly what AI cannot do: the relational, social, and emotionally intelligent work of building a school community.Impact: A principal who co-leads with AI this way gets leverage on administrative and instructional tasks while protecting the irreplaceable human elements that retain teachers and engage students. KRIS QUOTES FROM THE RUCKUSCAST "The idea that Silicon Valley is defining how humans will interact in the future is the most perverse thing that's ever happened in the history of society." — Kris Rockwell "Trinity does not learn how to fly a helicopter. She learns how to simulate a helicopter. She has no idea how to fly a helicopter once she's unplugged from that experience. So in that realm, what we're doing is looking at the simulation and saying, well, this is the future of learning. But it's not." — Kris Rockwell "What's being put into the system directly feeds what is coming out of the system." — Kris Rockwell "Code is becoming philosophy rather than engineering at this point." — Kris Rockwell "If I'm the co principal, I'm focusing on the human elements and how to make these things functional and how to make sure that the critical thinking is there." — Kris Rockwell "Ensure that it is a tool and not the tool. Ensure that those things that the kids have access to extend beyond what they're staring at." — Kris Rockwell 🧗‍♂️ Your Do School Different Challenge Ready to implement? Start here: Tomorrow: Audit one Edtech tool currently in use on your campus and ask whether students are staring at it for the majority of the time — if yes, identify one way it could be a gateway to an offline or physical experience instead.This Month: Draft a one-page AI use framework for your campus...
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet