With only a bare bones policy from Oakland Unified School District, educators are on their own figuring out how to incorporate artificial intelligence platforms and keep students from misusing them.
by Ashley McBride Sept. 16, 2025, 4:55 p.m. (Oaklandside.org)

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When Calupe Kaufusi was a freshman at McClymonds High School in West Oakland, he’d use platforms like ChatGPT or Google Gemini for written assignments in his history class. But he quickly learned they weren’t infallible.
“It became kind of inconvenient,” Kaufusi said. “As I learned more about AI, I learned it wouldn’t give you correct information and we’d have to fact check it.”
Like many students, Kaufusi used generative AI platforms — where users can input a prompt and receive answers in various formats, be it an email text, an essay, or the answers to a test — to get his work done quickly and without much effort. Now a junior, Kaufusi said he’s dialed down his AI use.
Already rampant in college and university settings, artificial intelligence software is also reshaping the K-12 education landscape. Absent a detailed policy in the Oakland Unified School District, individual teachers and schools have been left to navigate how to integrate the technology in their classrooms — or how to try to keep it out.

Some teachers told The Oaklandside they are choosing to embrace AI by incorporating it into student projects or using it to assist with their own lesson planning, while others have said they’ve rejected it for its environmental impacts and how it enables students to cut corners. Some teachers are returning to old forms of assessment, such as essays handwritten during class that can’t be outsmarted by the platforms.
What’s clear to many is that AI platforms are already ubiquitous on the internet and many students are going to use them whether their teachers advise them to or not.
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Kaufusi, who is in McClymonds’ engineering pathway, is interested in studying machine learning or software engineering, so he wants to see more of his teachers discuss responsible uses for AI. “They know there’s no way to stop us” from using it, he said, “so they can try to teach us how to use it properly.”
A new policy in the works
Under current OUSD guidance, published in March, teachers and principals are left to determine whether students are allowed to use AI in their work; if they do, students are required to cite it. The guidance also outlines procedures for teachers to follow if they suspect a student is misusing AI, for example, by representing AI-generated work as their own, starting with a private conversation with the student, then the collection of evidence, and finally a consultation with colleagues about proper discipline.
Work is underway in Oakland Unified to develop a more comprehensive AI policy for the district, said Kelleth Chinn, the district’s instructional technology coordinator. In his role, he’s been thinking about how to address student use of AI. A former classroom teacher, Chinn can imagine beneficial uses for both students and teachers in the classroom, but he knows teaching students responsible uses for AI doesn’t preclude them from using it in dishonest ways.
“The reason that we need to talk about AI to students is because a lot of students are already using it,” Chinn told The Oaklandside. “In the absence of having any kind of conversations, you’re just leaving this vacuum without guidance for students.”
Any new draft policy would first be evaluated by the school board’s teaching and learning committee before being considered by the full board of directors. VanCedric Williams, chair of that committee, has met with Chinn and his team to discuss potential approaches. Williams, a veteran teacher, said he is hesitant to recommend a policy that would encourage educators to use AI.
“I do not want to put any expectations for teachers or students to use it or not,” Williams told The Oaklandside. “We’re looking at best practices around the state, what other districts are doing and what pitfalls they’ve incurred.”
Chinn added that he’s been looking at how colleges and universities are addressing AI. What he’s found is that some professors are turning away from papers and written homework assignments and toward methods like blue book exams and oral presentations that preclude the use of AI.
‘We just want our kids to be able to critically think’
Some teachers are hesitant to fully embrace the technology, concerned that it could hamper student learning and critical thinking. At Oakland Technical High School, a group of history and English teachers have formed a professional learning community to study AI in education and come up with potential guidance.
Amanda Laberge and Shannon Carey, who both teach juniors at Oakland Tech, joined the group as AI skeptics. Carey, who has been teaching in OUSD since 1992, sees AI differently than she does other advances in technology that have taken place over the course of her career.
“A computer is a tool: You can draft your essay and I can put comments on it,” Carey, a history teacher, told The Oaklandside. “Whereas AI, the way many students are using it, is to do their thinking for them.”
Carey noted that after years of a drive to incorporate more tech in the classroom, the tide is turning on cell phones — many schools now have “no smartphone” policies and last year Governor Gavin Newsom signed a law, which goes into effect in 2026, requiring all school districts to prohibit cell phone use during the school day.
Neither Carey nor Laberge plan to use AI themselves, the way some educators use it for grading or lesson planning.

Laberge, who teaches English in Oakland Tech’s race, policy, and law pathway, assigned her students a project encouraging them to think critically about AI. They’ll survey other students on how they use AI, research the cognitive impacts of relying on AI, gain an understanding of how exactly the algorithms and platforms operate, and examine wider societal implications.
“Our job is to help them develop skills and thinking so as adults they can do whatever they want,” Laberge said.
Laberge and Carey said they want to see OUSD put together an evidence-based policy around AI use. They mentioned a 2025 MIT study that monitored brain function for groups writing an essay. The authors found that those using a large language model to assist in writing the essay had lower brain activity than those who didn’t, and they had more trouble quoting their own work.
“We just want our kids to be able to critically think and read and write fluently and with grace,” Carey said. “We do not see a way in which AI is going to make that happen.”
Using AI strategically
At Latitude High School in Fruitvale, educators are taking a different approach. Computer science students at the charter school, which emphasizes project-based learning, are incorporating AI into math video games they’re creating for local fourth graders. This is the first year that classes have introduced AI as part of the curriculum, according to Regina Kruglyak, the school’s dean of instruction.
Students first write out code on their own, then run it through ChatGPT to test their ideas and find errors. The school uses GoGuardian, a software that can block websites, to restrict access to ChatGPT when students aren’t actively using it for an assignment, Kruglyak said.
“We were nervous about the possibility that students will forget how to do certain things, or they’ll never learn how to do it in the first place because they’ll just fall back on having ChatGPT do it for them,” Kruglyak said. “That’s where we use GoGuardian. Making sure that students are using their own brains and learning the skills in the first place feels very crucial.”
Kruglyak coaches Latitude’s science teachers and has held professional development sessions on new AI platforms. She recently introduced Notebook LM, a Google platform that can summarize documents and organize notes into various media. Kruglyak tested it by uploading a grant application and having the software turn it into a podcast. Her goal, she said, is to “change teachers’ minds about what AI can do, and how to help students learn from it rather than be scared of it as a teacher.”
It’s not only high school educators who are confronting students using AI. Joel Hamburger, a fifth grade teacher at Redwood Heights Elementary School, said with students using Google on their Chromebooks, AI results come up every time they type in a Google search. Hamburger, who has been teaching for four years, said this calendar year is when he first started noticing how unavoidable AI is in the classroom.
“Google AI culls the information from the internet and immediately gives you a response,” Hamburger told The Oaklandside. “Whereas a year or two ago, it gave you websites to go to.”
For now, he allows his students to use Google’s AI for filling out simple worksheets in class. At this time of year, Hamburger’s focus is teaching his students how to craft the right inputs to get the answers they’re looking for. During a spring unit on research projects, he’ll lay out the foundations for evaluating information and factchecking what Google serves up.
Any kind of AI policy should include tiered guidance for various grade levels, Hamburger said. While fifth graders may not be using ChatGPT, he said, they’re surrounded by AI on their devices and guidance for them may not look the same as instructions for a high schooler.
“The genie’s just about to be brought out of the bottle for these 10-year-olds,” he said. “They need to know appropriate uses.”
ASHLEY MCBRIDE
Ashley McBride writes about education equity for The Oaklandside. Her work covers Oakland’s public district and charter schools. Before joining The Oaklandside in 2020, Ashley was a reporter for the San Antonio Express-News and the San Francisco Chronicle as a Hearst Journalism Fellow. In 2024, Ashley received the California School Board Association’s Golden Quill Award, which recognizes fair, accurate, and insightful reporting on public schools. Ashley earned her master’s degree in journalism from Syracuse University and holds a certificate in education finance from Georgetown University.More by Ashley McBride