Monday, April 20, 2026

ADHD Misconceptions: What Your Students Need You to Know

From the Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis

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ADHD can be so misunderstood. I know there was a season I had to learn about what it is. How to be sensitive to students — and my own children. As a Mom, a child with ADHD is a very sensitive topic to me. Even in hindsight I remember the struggle and wonder if the decisions I made were on point based on what today's guest and many others have taught me about ADHD. This is the episode I wish I could have had as a Mom and a teacher fifteen years a go.

But I can't go back, but I can help all of us go forward.

You see, often when we think about ADHD, we might picture a student who can't sit still or struggles with focus. That is only the story. This misconception was one I wished I could have cleared up sooner for myself because it can cost our students (and children) confidence, relationships, and success.

Jheri South, a certified ADHD specialist and a Mom of seven (yes I said 7) neurodivergent children shares important information we need to know.

The neuroscience is clear: ADHD is far more about what happens in the mind than about the behaviors we see. When we understand this, it can change so much about how we teach (and parent) in ways that help everyone be happier.

When we think about ADHD in the classroom, most of us picture a student who can’t sit still or struggles with focus. But that’s only half the story—and it’s a misconception that’s costing our students real confidence, real relationships, and real success. Jheri South, a certified ADHD specialist and mom of seven neurodivergent kids, is here to set the record straight. The neuroscience is clear: ADHD is far more about what’s happening inside the mind than the behaviors we see, and understanding that difference changes everything about how we teach.

Sponsor: VAI Educator's Studio

This episode is sponsored by Van Andel Institute for Education — Educator’s Studio.

Classroom-tested lessons, hands-on projects, and professional development for K–8 teachers. Get an annual membership for only $9.99 using promo code COOLCAT for 50% off. Head over to coolcatteacher.com/vai to explore resources that save you time while sparking real creativity in your classroom.

In this episode, you’ll discover the five things that actually engage an ADHD brain (hint: “just try harder” isn’t one of them), the hidden emotional struggle that affects 95% of people with ADHD, and the simple shifts in classroom practice that turn frustration into breakthrough moments.

Key Takeaways for ADHD in Your Classroom

  • ADHD is neurological, not behavioral. The DSM focuses on behaviors, but ADHD is primarily about what’s happening inside the brain—overthinking, hyperarousal, and inconsistent executive function. Understanding this distinction is the first step to moving beyond judgment and toward compassion and strategy.
  • The five things that engage an ADHD brain are: novelty, interest, challenge or competition, urgency, and passion. For neurotypical students, importance and reward are enough. For ADHD students, at least one of these five must be present. This is why students procrastinate until the night before—urgency turns the brain on. It’s not laziness; it’s neurology.
  • Rejection sensitivity dysphoria (RSD) affects 95% of people with ADHD and is a primary source of emotional dysregulation. Being called on unexpectedly, constructive criticism, and perceived failure trigger intense emotional responses. One-third of people with ADHD say RSD is their most impairing symptom—more disabling than distractibility.
  • Inconsistency erodes self-confidence. ADHD students don’t know why their brain engages sometimes and not others. This unpredictability is why they often lack confidence in their abilities, not because they lack ability. Consistency in expectations and support rebuilds that confidence.
  • Classroom placement and private conversations matter. Putting an ADHD student in the back to minimize distraction may backfire if they have RSD. Private conversations away from peers show respect and reduce shame. Sometimes the perfect comeback is no comeback—it’s moving forward with support.

Resources Mentioned in This Episode

Visual Summary

Infographic showing the five engagement triggers for ADHD brains: Novelty, Interest, Challenge/Competition, Urgency, and Passion
How ADHD brains differ from neurotypical brains in what triggers focus and engagement.

Tool Use Disclosure: This graphic was created from the transcript of this episode in Google Notebook LM. Then it was put into Canva and edited by Vicki Davis using Magic Text grab to correct mistakes, typos, and data errors, and other inconsistencies, and to add research. Claude Cowork was used to compare each mentioned fact with what was said by both Vicki and Jheri on the episode and against research to ensure accuracy. Vicki Davis edited and reviewed this graphic. Research-backed: Dodson (ADDitude); Shaw et al. (Am J Psychiatry, 2014); Barkley (Guilford Press, 2015); Geissler et al. (2014). Full citations at coolcatteacher.com/e932. I provide this disclosure, not because I feel required to, but because I'm often asked about the different tools I use to create infographics, verify their data, and how I edit to improve accuracy and spelling. I hope this helps!

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About Jheri South

Jheri South is an ADHD instructor and mom of 7 neurodivergent kids.

Jheri South is a Certified Teen & Parent Coach, Master ADHD Instructor, mom of 7 neurodivergent kids, and founder of Headspace HUB. Jheri supports individuals with ADHD using practical coaching strategies that work, no therapy, just real results. She also empowers teens, parents, and families to communicate better, build confidence, and overcome habits that hold them back.

Creator of ADHD Simplified, Jheri offers 1:1 coaching, online courses, in school training for neurodivergence, and in-person workshops to help people take control of their lives.

Connect with Jheri:

Other Shows You’ll Love

Research Backing the ADHD Misconceptions Infographic

The information shared by Jheri South in this episode is supported by peer-reviewed research and established clinical work on ADHD. For listeners, educators, and clinicians who want to dig deeper or verify the claims in our infographic, here are the primary sources organized by topic.

Hyper-Arousal vs. Hyperactivity

The “No-Filter” Reality (Sensory Gating)

Working Memory & Executive Function

The NICUP Framework — Five Things That Engage the ADHD Brain

Jheri South's NICUP framework (Novelty, Interest, Challenge or Competition, Urgency, Passion) is her teaching reorder of Dr. William Dodson's original INCUP model, which describes ADHD as an “interest-based” rather than “importance-based” nervous system.

Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria (RSD)

The 95% prevalence figure and the “one-third report RSD as their most impairing symptom” finding both come from Dr. William Dodson's clinical research, popularized through ADDitude Magazine and CHADD.

Emotional Dysregulation as a Core Feature of ADHD

The strongest peer-reviewed citations supporting the emotional core of the infographic.

Classroom Strategies — Seating & Teacher-Student Relationships

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Episode Transcript

This transcript was generated using AI and has been reviewed by humans for accuracy. Minor errors or artifacts may remain.

Click to read the full transcript

Vicki Davis (00:05)
Today’s episode is brought to you by the Educators Studio from Van Andel Institute for Education. If you’re a K through eight STEM teacher looking for classroom tested lessons, hands-on projects, and time-saving resources, you can get an annual membership for only $9.99 using the promo code COOLCAT. More on this after the show.

Vicki Davis (00:32)
Jheri South is a certified teen and parent coach and master ADHD instructor. She has a unique personal perspective. She’s a mom of seven neurodivergent children Headspace Hub and the creator of the ADHD Simplified program. And the goal is to empower teens, parents and families to manage ADHD through practical coaching strategies.

Jheri, we’re getting ready to go back to school and ADHD can be so misunderstood, can’t it? what are some things that as we teachers prepare to go back, just some reminders that you would just love all of us to remember about our precious ADHD students?

Jheri South (01:19)
I love this question because there are some good reminders here. I think that because over the years, the idea of ADHD and what it is has changed so much that there is a lot of misinformation out there. in we’ve really just focused on behaviors for ADHD, So it’s been that.

hyperactive that can’t sit still in class, or the person that’s just really struggling with math. And in fact, the DSM still focuses mostly on behavior. So we’re not doing a great job it is, really catching ADHD as a whole. And then there’s so many things that not only does the DSM miss, but just in general, teachers, guardians, because ADHD is so much more what’s going on inside your mind.

than it is behaviors. some misconceptions might be if they’re not they don’t have ADHD. We no longer use the term ADD. Everything falls under the umbrella of ADHD because the majority of people with ADHD will actually have hyper arousal more than hyperactivity. So that means they’re overthinking. Many ADHDers are very panicky that a teacher could call on them in class. I remember I could forget my name.

Vicki Davis (02:04)
Mm-hmm.

Hmm.

Jheri South (02:30)
I was being called on and so and I hear this a lot from my teenagers that they’re struggling in class to pay attention because they’re so worried that the teacher is going to call on get kids in junior high and high school they worry about what people think about them their crush could be in class or whatever it is and now it’s like just don’t call on me you know just understanding that there’s a short-term memory.

Vicki Davis (02:32)
Wow.

Wow.

Jheri South (02:51)
deficiency there or deficit. kids become very panicky about being called on, put on the spot. They really struggle because ADHDers, one of the main reasons they struggle so much with self-confidence is because they’re not consistent everywhere. You really have to be consistent in life, I think for the most part. mean, no one’s 100%.

Vicki Davis (03:06)
Mm-hmm.

Yeah.

Jheri South (03:11)
have self-confidence. You have to know that when someone asks you to do something or something’s going to be due or completed, that your brain’s going to be able to and get things done. And ADHDers don’t know why sometimes their brain will turn on and sometimes it won’t. So another thing I want to bring up is that there are five things that engage the ADHD brain.

Vicki Davis (03:27)
Mm-hmm.

Jheri South (03:34)
For a neurotypical brain, it just has to be the thing in front of them is important or there will be a reward at the end. For ADHDers, that does absolutely nothing. So that means that many times labeled as lazy, unwilling procrastinators. So one thing that I’ll see time and time again is that ADHDers will struggle, let’s even say math. Most ADHDers struggle with math.

Vicki Davis (03:41)
Mm-hmm.

Mmm.

Jheri South (03:57)
and they’re not getting a very good grade, they’re not finishing their work, and then maybe there will be an important exam at the end of the quarter or something like that. And they know that if they fail this, they are failing. Well, one of the five things, novelty, interest, challenge or competition, urgency, right, and passion has to be present for the ADHD brain to get engaged. Teenagers don’t know this, most parents and teachers don’t know this, so they’re just saying,

Vicki Davis (04:09)
Mm.

Jheri South (04:26)
Why can’t you try harder? Just try harder, just focus. Not helpful. urgency is one of the five. So this is the reason why all week something might be due and they cannot get themselves to do then at like 10 or 11 o’clock the night before, their brain isn’t just getting it done, it’s hyper I’ll see this scenario play out quite a bit where a child

be struggling in a subject, they’re not getting their homework done.

And then they’ll hyper-focus when it’s really important because they don’t want to fail. And maybe they’ll get a on exam. And the teachers and parents will say, see, When you really try, you can do it. You’re not working hard enough. they don’t understand this nick up acronym and why urgency. It just turns the brain on. The teenagers don’t understand. And so even they’re confused when someone asks them,

Vicki Davis (04:59)

Jheri South (05:11)
Why could you do this? Why could you get a B in study but you can’t get your homework done? When they say, don’t know, they really don’t know.

Vicki Davis (05:21)
my son who is ADHD he put himself on medication in college. He’s like, I’m not going to get through. we did our best in high school, but he’s like, mom, this is what you have to understand about me. It’s not that I can’t pay attention. It’s that I pay attention to everything. I have no filter. I see everything. And so when that professor is at the front talking and somebody’s rustling a piece of paper over here and somebody’s opening and

Jheri South (05:37)
night.

Vicki Davis (05:45)
getting a cough drop over here and somebody, all of it is going in and I have no way to just focus in. you know, sometimes I’ll see even, when I have a precious ADHD student, sometimes I’ll see teachers might put them at the back of the room and I’m thinking, I know that can be a distraction, but you know, that may not be the best place for that child.

Jheri South (06:05)
Hmm.

Jheri South (06:16)
there’s something called rejection sensitivity dysphoria, or RSD, that’s associated with ADHD. And 95 % of all ADHDers will experience RSD to some degree. And one third of all have ADHD say that RSD is their most impairing symptom.

Vicki Davis (06:29)
Mmm.

Jheri South (06:29)
something that isn’t well known, in my opinion, with ADHD is that emotional dysregulation is usually just impairing, if not more impairing than distractibility for ADHDers. And so what this means is there’s an extreme sensitivity to rejection. It’s usually perceived rejection, but it can be triggered by a number of things, teasing, constructive criticism, the idea that they failed to meet your expectations or failed to meet their own. But when RSD is triggered,

Vicki Davis (07:01)
Wow.

Vicki Davis (07:07)
Mm-hmm.

Vicki Davis (07:07)
one thing I just want to repeat that was so important was the five things you said, the novelty, interest, challenge, urgency, and passion. I’m in my classroom. I’m very big gold standard project-based learning, which is so much around interest. I’ve taught my own children.

and as a teacher, I just encourage all of us, we want to be that teacher that’s the difference maker. cause when you start teaching and you’re young, you think, it’s having the perfect comeback. No, no, no, no, no.

It’s having no comeback. It’s saying, hey, let’s go back away from everybody and have a private conversation so we can move forward. And, you know, when I think about my own children’s journey, having teachers who choose to be difference makers instead of put downers, who just say, you can’t, you can’t, you can’t, you’re not, you’re not, you’re not, you won’t, you won’t, you won’t. And instead saying,

You can, believe in you. can. And it’s incredible the difference that I’ve seen in my own kids and in children who do have lots of differences. So, so much great advice, Jheri South, and thank you for talking to us about a really important topic as we go back to school, ADHD. Thanks for coming on the show.

Vicki Davis (08:17)
Before you go, I want to tell you about today’s sponsor, the VAI Educators Studio from Van Andel Institute for Education. Do you know how it feels when you just find that perfect lesson that works? The VAI Educators Studio is packed with classroom tested lessons, hands-on projects, and skill building activities.

designed specifically for K through eight teachers Plus you get on demand professional development and a community of educators who get it. I’ve been exploring their resources.

and love how they’re built to save you time while sparking real creativity in your classroom.

you can get 50 % off membership to the Educators Studio by using the promo code COOLCAT when you sign So head over to coolcateacher.com forward slash V-A-I The VAI Educators Studio, because great teaching should not mean endless prep.

And remember, use the promo code

Disclosure of Material Connection

Disclosure of Material Connection: This episode is a sponsored episode. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I believe will be good for my readers and are from companies I can recommend. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.” This company has no impact on the editorial content of the show.

Jheri South with bold text “ADHD Misconceptions” and “What Teachers Need to Know”
Jheri South, ADHD specialist, joins Vicki Davis to discuss common misconceptions about ADHD in the classroom and practical strategies for teachers.

The post ADHD Misconceptions: What Your Students Need You to Know appeared first on Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher helping educators be excellent every day. Meow!

If you're seeing this on another site, they are "scraping" my feed and taking my content to present it to you so be aware of this.


from Cool Cat Teacher Blog
https://www.coolcatteacher.com/e932/

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Free AI Resources for Teachers: Hour of AI and Beyond

From the Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis

Subscribe to the 10 Minute Teacher Podcast anywhere you listen to podcasts.

Everyone is talking about AI. How do we start? I started my journey into teaching coding with amazing resources, with Hour of Code and Code.org. Now, we have “Hour of AI” resources and other tools collected by Code.org that we can use anytime. In this episode, Karim Meghji, President and CEO at Code.org, shares how AI literacy belongs in every classroom for all ages. In addition to Hour of AI, you'll hear about unplugged resources that teach kids about AI without a single computer.

A 2025 RAND Corporation study found that AI use in schools is rising rapidly — but guidance and teacher training are lagging behind, with a concerning equity gap between low-poverty and high-poverty districts. They said that the proliferation of generative artificial intelligence has created a “fast-moving, real-time social experiment at scale.” This is so concerning to me and should be to all of us!

Please don't assume that kids just “know” how to use AI tools. When I taught an AI literacy lesson recently, several eighth graders were genuinely stunned to learn that AI doesn't actually “think.” Wow!

This episode is sponsored by the VAI Educators Studio from Van Andel Institute for Education. If you're a K-8 STEM teacher looking for classroom-tested lessons, hands-on projects, and time-saving resources, you can get 50% off an annual membership using the promo code COOLCAT. Head to coolcatteacher.com/vai to learn more.

Key Takeaways for Teachers from Karim Meghji

  • AI Literacy applies beyond computer science class. Students need to know how to use AI tools responsibly and ethically, as well as how they work. As Karim says in the show, you don't have to be a mechanic to drive a car, but understanding the basics of how it functions matters.
  • Code.org's Hour of AI brings together hundreds of partners who offer one-hour activities across grade levels and subject areas. Whether you want to fit an AI activity into an English class or a math class, you'll find a resource. The key message: just start by doing.
  • AI 101 for teachers. We need to build our confidence with AI. This course from Code.org can get us teachers started with the foundation to guide our students.
  • Unplugged AI lessons give options for teaching content to students without a computer needed. Whether a school is concerned about screen time or doesn't have computers, unplugged lessons are a great place to start.
  • Computational thinking is the foundation. Skills like sequencing, algorithms, and pattern matching are used every day. Students with a foundation in thinking in these ways will have an advantage when describing the apps and programs they can easily create with a good prompt.

Code.org Resources

  • Hour of AI — Code.org's free collection of one-hour AI activities from hundreds of partners, organized by grade level and subject area.
  • Code.org — The nonprofit dedicated to ensuring every student has the opportunity to learn computer science and AI.
  • Code.org AI 101 — Free professional learning curriculum for teachers to build their own AI literacy in just a few hours.
  • Computer Science Discoveries — Code.org's middle school curriculum, which includes AI education and is being expanded.
  • Code.org Unplugged Activities — Hands-on, no-computer-needed lessons that teach computer science and AI concepts through discussion and collaboration.

Other Tools Mentioned

  • CodeCombat — Game-based coding platform Vicki found through Code.org many years ago and still uses with students.
  • MIT RAISE AI Curriculum — MIT's initiative for Responsible AI for Social Empowerment and Education, offering K-12 AI curriculum resources.

Research & Studies

Sponsor

  • VAI Educators Studio — Classroom-tested lessons, hands-on projects, and professional development for K-8 teachers. Use promo code COOLCAT for 50% off.

Visual Summary

This infographic highlights the key AI literacy takeaways from Karim Meghji's interview on the 10 Minute Teacher Podcast.

AI Literacy for All Ages infographic with Karim Meghji showing AI across subjects, computational thinking, and Code.org resources.
AI literacy isn't just for the CS lab. Karim Meghji, President and CEO of Code.org, shares how AI fits into every classroom — from kindergarten classroom procedures to high school AP — on Episode 931 of the 10 Minute Teacher Podcast.

Disclosure: This graphic was created by Google Notebook LM from the transcript. There were quite a few issues so I used Text Magic Grab in Canva to edit. I performed several fact checks between the infographic and the transcript using Claude Cowork to ensure it reflects our guest's opinions. I hope this disclosure helps those who would like transparency to understand the use of AI. – Vicki Davis, your host

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Free AI Resources for Teachers: Hour of AI and Beyond

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About Karim Meghji

Karim Meghji, President and CEO at Code.org, guest on the 10 Minute Teacher Podcast discussing AI literacy K–12
Karim Meghji, President and CEO at Code.org, shares free AI literacy resources for K–12 teachers on the 10 Minute Teacher Podcast.

Karim Meghji is the President and CEO at Code.org, the nonprofit dedicated to ensuring every student in every school has the opportunity to learn computer science and AI. Code.org is known worldwide for Hour of Code and the new Hour of AI. Karim previously served as the CPO at Code.org, leading the global effort to bring CS and AI into K-12 classrooms. His path was shaped in high school, when a teacher inspired a lifelong passion for technical problem-solving — a “lightbulb moment” that now fuels his mission to empower students everywhere. A seasoned executive with experience in scaling high-growth companies, he has served in leadership roles at Remitly, Booking.com and RealNetworks. He is dedicated to the vision that teaching students how technology works gives them the agency to build the future.

Website: code.org

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Episode Transcript

This transcript was generated using AI and has been reviewed by humans for accuracy. Minor errors or artifacts may remain.

Click to read the full transcript

Vicki Davis (00:05)
Today's episode is brought to you by the Educators Studio from Van Andel Institute for Education. If you're a K through eight STEM teacher looking for classroom tested lessons, hands-on projects, and time-saving resources, you can get an annual membership for only $9.99 using the promo code COOLCAT. More on this after the show.

Vicki Davis (00:32)
Karim Meghji is the President and CEO at Code.org. It is the nonprofit dedicated to ensuring every student in every school has the opportunity to learn computer science and AI. Of course, Code.org has been known for Hour of Code. Now it's Hour of AI. And Karim, as we talk about artificial intelligence, does it have to be taught just in a computer science class or is this something that could be for all ages and stages of students?

Karim Meghji (01:05)
I love to start with this kind of a question. The answer is no. At the end of the day, AI literacy applicable in the understanding of how to use AI responsibly, ethically — they apply well beyond computer science. So whether it's in language arts, math, science, there are a lot of applications where using AI done with good guidance from teachers, done well because students understand how and when to use AI, I think is important.

I'll add the one thing though, and that is that AI literacy should go broader than just how these tools work across subjects. At Code.org, we've spent a decade with the mission that computer science is foundational, that every student, just like they learn English, math, and science, should be learning computer science. And so when we think about computer science and AI together, we believe students should not only learn how to use the tools, but how do the tools work? And that does fit within the context of a technical sciences curriculum or course.

Vicki Davis (01:58)
So I love all the content you have. As we were talking before the show, I teach AP Computer Science Principles and some of my favorite tools I found through Code.org many years ago, whether it was Code Combat, the MIT AI curriculum, a lot of different things like that. You have resources that beginning teachers who are just like, hey, I know I need to teach this, but I don't know where to start — where does a beginner know where to go and what to do?

Karim Meghji (02:25)
You touched on actually probably one of the best places for a teacher who's dipping their toes in the water of teaching AI to students at all grade levels, by the way. And that is the Hour of AI. We started the Hour of Code years ago and we brought together hundreds of partners across the computer science community, bringing together their expertise and their experience of teaching students computer science in just one hour. And that's what we did for a decade.

This past year in December 2025, we launched the Hour of AI and have done the same thing. We brought together hundreds of partners who in one hour teach students a variety of aspects of AI. So that would be a great starting point. Go to hourofai.org and see the resources we have there. We have activities by lots of partners that target different age groups, different areas, depending upon what you want to fit it in. Maybe you want to do something in an English class. You'll be able to find a really good resource for that. That's the first thing. Just start by doing, and that's the place to do it.

The other thing that I would say for those who are just starting out is, you know, to be confident at teaching any subject with students, you yourself have to be confident at some level with the subject itself. That's another area that I would really encourage teachers to engage in, which is the professional learning and development that they need to do. We offer resources — we have an AI 101 curriculum. It's just a few hours for teachers to start their own journey. So use our resources or there are a lot of other organizations that have these professional learning resources just to get you started. Don't forget to take care of your own education before you start that next step with students.

Vicki Davis (03:59)
And your computational thinking, which of course is part of the computer science area, is so important. I teach our kindergarten teachers that how you describe your classroom procedures can help your students foster that computational thinking that they need. Thinking in algorithms and steps, being able to break down topics — like these are all things that do impact every area. Okay, we need to maybe shift how we teach those classroom procedures so that we're incorporating computational thinking. While AI is important and it's part of what's going on, also understanding we don't want all this technology to be a black box to our students. We want them to understand that there's algorithms and what's going on behind the scenes, right?

Karim Meghji (04:47)
I completely agree. Computational thinking is a really interesting topic to discuss. Something that I say quite a bit is computational thinking isn't just about computers. It's about learning how to solve problems with lots of things. We use computational thinking every day without knowing it or calling it that. It just happens that when we try and structure our instructions for a computer, we speak in computational thinking terms to get that computer to do some of the things we want to do.

So learning things like sequencing and algorithms and pattern matching are important for young learners as they not only engage with the world around them, but with computers directly. Now as we move into this world of AI, this idea of learning what's happening under the hood gets even more important as these systems interact with us in human-like ways, but they're not human. And so what's happening? Probabilities, statistics, pattern matching, data. We want to start teaching about those concepts to students so as their world evolves, they are able to navigate it both as good consumers, but also as creators of a society that can shape those technologies.

Vicki Davis (05:54)
So Karim, one thing I've always loved about the Code.org content is that you have all these unplugged activities for teaching computer science. Do you have unplugged activities for teaching about artificial intelligence also? And unplugged means you don't need a computer. Like you could teach this stuff without a computer. And in many ways, I actually pull a lot of your unplugged content to even use in my AP class because you can get hands-on, you can go lids down with the computers and you can really understand how these things work.

Karim Meghji (06:24)
Love this question, Vicki. Young learners need to be away from devices to be interacting with each other and doing some learning in addition to just the core subject. So yes, we do have unplugged activities for AI. We've just begun to develop curriculum around AI unplugged, exploring generative AI as a specific unit that we built for middle school students.

It has two parts. The first part is just unplugged, getting away from the computer, having conversations, having discussions within the classroom itself. Then teachers can choose to take that next step and put them on computers and start to actually make it practical for them, the things that they've just learned. Yes, and we expect to do more — especially as we get to K-5, you'll see more from Code.org in the many months ahead, developing in both high school and elementary school, and middle school actually. But unplugged will be an important component of that for the reasons you described. It's an important modality because it teaches things like collaboration, communication, all the other skills that we're also trying to incorporate in the classroom, especially around problem solving and technology.

Vicki Davis (07:31)
I was teaching an AI literacy lesson to my eighth graders today. AI used to come at the end of the semester. It now has to be at the beginning because it's the elephant in the room and they all want to understand about it — the first wrongful death suit against ChatGPT. And a lot of these concerns, the kids are like, well, how could this happen? You know, and you talk about the Eliza effect.

I think the moment that shocked me was I had a couple of kids when we got through how LLMs work, who looked at me and said, you mean AI doesn't think and it doesn't have a brain? They were literally stunned. And I think some of it's the metaphors maybe used in advertising — we always see the electronic brain or whatever. I had a teacher one time say, I just explained it to my students that it's just like an electronic brain. And it's shocking to me sometimes how hungry kids are to actually understand how it works.

Karim Meghji (08:21)
Learning, to your point, about what's actually happening under the hood is so important, right? I don't have to be a mechanic to drive a car, but it is good to understand how the car functions and how it works and what the basic physical properties are. And I would argue that the analog applies here in a world with AI where we're driving AI — we have to understand what it is. It's a tool that is made up of algorithms, data, math.

Vicki Davis (08:44)
So Karim, let's talk to educators about where they can start with all of your resources — maybe a few pointers to some of your favorite things that are out there. Let's just get some starting points for folks as we finish.

Karim Meghji (08:57)
I think elementary school is a great place. We have a lot of really fun activities for students. They learn to use AI. They get exposed to it. It's a way to dip your toe, both for the teacher and for the students. So that would be my one thought there.

Middle school curriculum — there's a lot of curriculum that's developing out there. We're in the middle of developing our own curriculum. If you go to code.org, you can see some of the stuff that we already have today that does include AI education. We're making it better. It's called Computer Science Discoveries. So stay tuned for more there, but it's also a really good starting point.

On our site, we have resources for a lot of partners, so that's the last thing I'll leave you with. Just about any domain of work you want to explore — if you're teaching English and you want to bring some AI into that, you can find partners and curriculum. So just go to code.org under Teach, you'll find all of our resources.

Vicki Davis (09:49)
Before you go, I want to tell you about today's sponsor, the VAI Educators Studio from Van Andel Institute for Education. Do you know how it feels when you just find that perfect lesson that works? The VAI Educators Studio is packed with classroom-tested lessons, hands-on projects, and skill-building activities designed specifically for K through eight teachers. Plus you get on-demand professional development and a community of educators who get it. I've been exploring their resources and love how they're built to save you time while sparking real creativity in your classroom. You can get 50% off membership to the Educators Studio by using the promo code COOLCAT when you sign up. So head over to coolcatteacher.com/vai. The VAI Educators Studio — because great teaching should not mean endless prep. And remember, use the promo code COOLCAT.

Disclosure of Material Connection: This episode includes some affiliate links. This means that if you choose to buy I will be paid a commission on the affiliate program. However, this is at no additional cost to you. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I believe will be good for my readers and are from companies I can recommend. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.” This company has no impact on the editorial content of the show.

The post Free AI Resources for Teachers: Hour of AI and Beyond appeared first on Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher helping educators be excellent every day. Meow!

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Tuesday, April 14, 2026

7 Classroom-Tested Inquiry-Based Learning Resources That Save Teachers Time

From the Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis

Subscribe to the 10 Minute Teacher Podcast anywhere you listen to podcasts.

The scientific method isn't just for science class. The exploration, the curiosity, the collaboration and teamwork, and the pursuit of finding a better way to do something should be part of every single thing we do in education. It is imperative that we help our students understand the scientific method but that we also inspire the curiosity that the next generation of problem solvers needs. Teachers are so busy, so I am always on the lookout for diverse resources that bring learning alive. One such example is highlighted in today's post.

Disclosure: This post is sponsored by Van Andel Institute for Education. All opinions are my own. I only partner with organizations whose resources I believe genuinely help teachers and students. For my full disclosure policy, see my sponsorship disclosure page.

The VAI Educator's Studio is a resource-packed platform designed to save K–8 teachers time and spark creativity with classroom-tested lessons, hands-on projects, skill-building activities, on-demand professional development, and a supportive educator community.

Sign up now with the promo code COOLCAT to get 50% off membership to the studio, the resource I'm sharing in this blog post.

When the Van Andel Institute for Education surveyed scientists and engineers about what they actually want from the students schools are sending them, I thought the answer was surprising. It wasn't memorized facts or high test scores. It was critical thinking, creative thinking, and perseverance. Terra Tarango, Chief Education Officer at VAI Education, told me on the 10 Minute Teacher podcast:

“That's what the scientists said was most important — critical thinking, creative thinking, perseverance. So if you're doing those skills, you are actually helping teach science.”

— Terra Tarango, Chief Education Officer, Van Andel Institute for Education

I've been teaching computer science and STEM courses since 2002, and one of my biggest frustrations has always been the gap between what I want to do in my classroom and the time it takes to find or create the materials to make it happen. That's why I was so excited when I got a sneak peek at the VAI Educator's Studio from the Van Andel Institute for Education. This platform is packed with over 600 classroom-tested resources designed by teachers, for teachers.

In this post, I will share with you seven resources and features inside the VAI Educator's Studio to save K–8 teachers time and bring critical thinking and engagement into our classrooms.

Students building marshmallow and toothpick towers during an inquiry-based learning engineering challenge in the classroom
In this marshmallow challenge, students first constructed towers of marshmallows and toothpicks on their own as part of an inquiry-based learning activity from the VAI Educator's Studio.

1. Collaborative Engineering Projects That Are Ready to Go

As I was testing these resources, I planned a “Fun Friday” for my computer applications eighth grade class a few weeks ago. I wanted to include a collaborative engineering design challenge. I went to the VAI Educator's Studio and found a collaborative engineering project using marshmallows and toothpicks where students learn engineering concepts while discovering the measurable power of collaboration.

Close-up of a completed marshmallow and toothpick tower built by students during an inquiry-based learning collaboration activity
Students worked together and discussed what they learned about constructing a stable tower. This activity came from the VAI Educator's Studio.

Everything was already prepared. All I had to do was search the resources, download and go. It was a great addition to my “Fun Friday” and it was so easy to find and use it and it worked. Sometimes things I've “created” with AI or downloaded from some website look great but my students can't relate to it and it doesn't work.

This kind of hands-on challenge is exactly what the experts say works. Recently, in my two-part STEAM Super Show series, Dr. Erin Krupa shared:

“You can't see projects and activities as something that we do after we finish all of the real work, because that was a really common message from the scientists. It's like no, that IS the real work.”

— Dr. Erin Krupa, Cool Cat Teacher Talk STEAM Super Show

2. Monthly Inquiry-Based Learning Ideas

Inside the VAI Educator's Studio, you'll find monthly activities connected to seasonal events and themes. These activities are differentiated by grade band (K–2, 3–5, and 6–8) and can be done in about 15 minutes.

This is one of my favorite features because I can go in and download quick calendar ideas to pull from any day of the month.

Terra Tarango explained the thinking behind these calendar-tied resources:

“We're really big on making sure this is not adding anything, but giving teachers something they can do — a quick calendar activity, a brain break with substance.”

— Terra Tarango, STEAM in Action SuperShow

For example, around March Madness, there are bracket-style activities you can adapt to any content area. Around Valentine's Day, there are science-based activities about the heart. Each month brings new, relevant, creative ways to connect learning to what's happening in the world.

Screenshot of VAI Educator's Studio Featured Timely Topics showing monthly inquiry-based learning mini-lessons for K-2, 3-5, and 6-8 grade bands
The VAI Educator's Studio offers monthly Timely Topics — 15-minute inquiry-based learning mini-lessons aligned to calendar events and differentiated by grade band.

3. Cross-Curricular Project-Based Learning Units

Cross-curricular units are important but so many teachers don't have collaborative planning time or they may have expertise in one area but not in others. A big benefit of these PBL units is that you don't have to be an expert in every subject to run them.

For example, Terra walked me through a kindergarten unit called “Saving the Bees” that illustrates this approach:

“The first lesson is all about science — learning about bees and pollination. Then they get into math, counting flowers and collecting data. By the end, students are writing persuasive letters about why bees matter.”

— Terra Tarango, STEAM in Action SuperShow

Each of the five lessons focuses on a different content area, so it is cross-curricular by design. We can weave science into reading and math without sacrificing content standards.

Screenshot of VAI Educator's Studio Save the Bees inquiry-based learning PBL unit showing Teacher Guide, Classroom Slides, and Student Handouts
The “Save the Bees” PBL Playbook in the VAI Educator's Studio includes a Teacher Guide, Classroom Slides, and Student Handouts — everything needed for cross-curricular inquiry-based learning.

4. 15 Minutes or Less: Quick Games and Activities

I'm always on the lookout for fun brain breaks but I like them to teach something. I found quite a few versatile examples in the VAI Educator's Studio.

Screenshot of Apple to Apples Science Edition 3-8 inquiry-based learning activity from the VAI Educator's Studio with category cards organized by grade level.
The Apple to Apples: Science Edition activity from the VAI Educator's Studio is a quick, fun inquiry-based learning game covering science vocabulary for grades 3–8.

In this brain break activity, students are divided into groups of 3–5 to discuss and have fun with vocabulary relating to science content. I love how versatile the activities are and how they go across multiple grade levels.

The neuroscience backs this up. Susan Riley, founder of the Institute for Arts Integration and STEAM, explained on the STEAM Super Show:

“What's happening is that your brain starts to light up in various areas… When that happens, this kind of creative cocktail happens that allows us to make connections much more easily.”

— Susan Riley, Institute for Arts Integration and STEAM

5. “Beat the Bot” AI Literacy Challenges

Screenshot of Beat the Bot inquiry-based learning activity for grades 3-5 from the VAI Educator's Studio showing ELA, Math, Science, and Social Studies AI comparison prompts
The “Beat the Bot” activity challenges students to complete tasks and compare their inquiry-based learning results to AI-generated responses across ELA, Math, Science, and Social Studies.

Karim Meghji, Chief Product Officer at Code.org recently told me,

“AI literacy is applicable in the understanding of how to use AI responsibly. Ethically, they apply well beyond computer science — they apply to every subject area.”

So, how do we bring AI into every subject area? Here is one idea from the VAI Educator's Studio.

A unique addition to the Studio is the “Beat the Bot” resource set. If you remember “beat the calculator” from school, this is the AI version. Students complete tasks — writing prompts, solving problems, analyzing data — and then compare their work to what AI generates. It's a fun, non-threatening way to teach AI literacy while reinforcing critical thinking skills.

Terra described the philosophy behind it:

“From now on, students are going to be asked to demonstrate how they can bring value that AI can't. We show them AI's response and then let them compare.”

— Terra Tarango, Cool Cat Teacher Talk STEAM Super Show

In these “Beat the Bot” activities, students are asked to do a task and then compare their results to AI to determine the unique value they bring to the work that goes above and beyond what AI is able to do.

6. The Teacher's Strategy Vault

With over 300 searchable teaching strategies, the Teacher's Strategy Vault lets you filter by subject, grade level, and instructional approach to find exactly what you need.

Terra shared the heart behind the Strategy Vault:

“The favorite thing that teachers have always liked when we do professional development — just the strategies, just quick things you can use in your classroom. The Strategy Vault is all of those in one place.”

— Terra Tarango, 10 Minute Teacher Podcast episode 930

Megan, a 3rd/4th grade teacher, said about the Strategy Vault:

“I love the organization and the ability to make comments! It is so easy to browse by clicking the ‘next strategy' button.”

So, this is a great place to start as you go into the VAI Educator's Studio.

7. On-Demand Professional Development and Educator Community

It can be so challenging to find time for professional development. The VAI Educator's Studio includes on-demand PD videos, expert-led courses, and a built-in community for sharing ideas and asking questions. Whether you have five minutes or an hour, there's something you can learn from.

What sets this PD apart is that it's grounded in what actual scientists and researchers say matters. VAI Education is affiliated with the Van Andel Institute, a world-class biomedical research organization, so the content reflects real scientific thinking — not just buzzwords.

The philosophy of engagement through curiosity runs through everything in the studio.

What Else You'll Find in the VAI Educator's Studio

Beyond these seven highlights, the VAI Educator's Studio is a treasure trove that keeps growing. Here's a quick look at what else is inside:

  • STEM Challenge Cards aligned with K–8 Next Generation Science Standards, each with challenge scenarios, criteria, suggested materials, and extension opportunities
  • Picture books paired with STEM challenges for cross-curricular learning
  • Inquiry-based science lessons built on how scientists actually work — doing before learning, questions before answers
  • Project-based learning guides ready for immediate classroom use
  • Educator community and affinity networks for collaboration and support
  • Resources designed for grades K–8 across every subject area — not just STEM
  • ✅ New content added regularly, including timely resources for AI literacy

Why This Matters Right Now

We have 3% of the population training 100% of tomorrow's workforce. As Terra told me, teachers have the most important job in the world because they are training every other job that is to come. That's a powerful responsibility, and teachers deserve tools that honor their time and make that job a little easier.

“If I can be a teacher fairy godmother, that's what I want to be. Because the job — it's too important to be as hard as it is.”

— Terra Tarango, Chief Education Officer, Van Andel Institute for Education

Infographic showing 7 classroom-tested inquiry-based learning resources from the VAI Educator's Studio including collaborative engineering projects, monthly learning ideas, cross-curricular PBL units, quick games, AI literacy challenges, Teacher's Strategy Vault, and on-demand PD
7 inquiry-based learning resources inside the VAI Educator's Studio that save K–8 teachers time — from collaborative engineering projects to AI literacy challenges. Sponsored by VAI Educator's Studio.

Try It for Yourself

If you're a K–8 teacher — whether you teach STEM, reading, English language arts, or anything in between — the VAI Educator's Studio has something for you.

Use the code CoolCat to get the VAI Educator's Studio for just $9.99 per year — that's half off for access to over 600 classroom-tested resources.

👉 Check out the VAI Educator's Studio here

VAI Educator's Studio also has a number of free resources available, so explore them for yourself to see what's there.

You can also hear more from Terra Tarango and many more STEAM experts on the two-part STEAM superseries. Part 1 was on the STEAM Mindset and Part 2 was on STEAM in Action.

I found so many great ideas and believe that you will too!

Disclosure of Material Connection: This is a “sponsored blog post.” The company who sponsored it compensated me via cash payment, gift, or something else of value to include a reference to their product. Regardless, I only recommend products or services that I believe will be good for my readers and are from companies I can recommend. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

Editorial Note: Some guests referenced in this post were interviewed independently on the Cool Cat Teacher Talk show and 10 Minute Teacher podcast. Their inclusion does not imply endorsement by or affiliation with the sponsor, nor does the sponsor endorse the views of individual guests.

The post 7 Classroom-Tested Inquiry-Based Learning Resources That Save Teachers Time appeared first on Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher helping educators be excellent every day. Meow!

If you're seeing this on another site, they are "scraping" my feed and taking my content to present it to you so be aware of this.


from Cool Cat Teacher Blog
https://www.coolcatteacher.com/7-classroom-tested-inquiry-based-learning-resources-that-save-teachers-time/

Monday, April 13, 2026

Nutella in Space, Vibe Coding, and Why Data-Driven Doesn’t Mean Data-Only

From the Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis

Subscribe to the 10 Minute Teacher Podcast anywhere you listen to podcasts.

Hello Reader,

April is here and it is exciting! Artemis II launched on April 1st – the first crewed mission beyond low Earth orbit since Apoolo 17 in 1972! Four astronauts are circling the moon RIGHT NOW as I write this. It is so exciting!

During the routine livestream, a jar of Nutella floated right through the cabin on camera. NASA and Nutella said it was just a happy accident but for me — a true Nutella fan — it was hilarious and magnificent

At Spring Break my family went to NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. I met Valerie Neal, a Smithsonian curator who wrote On a Mission — the story of all 61 U.S. women astronauts across 45 years of spaceflight. She interviewed thirty of the thirty-two living women astronauts for the book. She had fascinating things to say about the impact (or not) of space on women and I am trying to get her on my show!

OK, lots to share this week – vibe coding, inquiry based learning, data driven schools and a prompt you can use to add the research on fun to improve your lesson plans (Oh and how I made the graphic above – let's go!

video preview

Sponsor: TeachAid

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Do you wish you had an assistant to take your lesson plan ideas to create a unit that is standards aligned, engaging, and has all of the materials you need — diagnostics and daily lessons to projects, rubrics, and assessments — all in minutes? I've been exploring TeachAid with full platform access and am very impressed with what I'm seeing.

When TeachAid interviewed teachers about the tool, they found that teachers said they saved 80% of their planning time!

Now is a perfect time of year to take TeachAid for a test drive for your unit planning.
Teachers: sign up free at TeachAid.caAdministrators: get a FREE school pilot at TeachAid.ca/pilot — personalized, with white-glove support.

🛰️ 🛰️ 🛰️

What I'm Learning About AI Agents (and Why It Matters for Teachers)

Our latest Cool Cat Teacher Talk episode — S5E9: Vibe Coding, AI Agents, and What Teachers Need to Know — is a great one for getting up to date on where teachers are going with AI.

Here's the short version: vibe coding means describing what you want a computer program to do, and AI writes the code. I created an interactive game for my 8th graders where they kept an eagle warm by answering questions correctly. Students scored 5 points higher on average — with no retesting needed. Teachers are becoming “citizen programmers” and it's so helpful.

But the part I'm most excited about is what I shared about AI agents — specifically how I'm using Claude Cowork. It's installed directly on my computer (not web-based), and I can set folder-by-folder permissions for what it can access. Here's what I've built:

  • Daily email triage — runs at 4:15 PM, classifies my emails by importance (1-10), drafts responses, and flags what needs attention. I typically look, retype, and press send. I don't let AI do any of that. I do let it write a filter for emails I need to archive and I paste it in, scan the emails and do it myself.
  • Voice memo transformer — turns my morning voice memos into multiple formats automatically letting me dictate everything from emails to blog posts.
  • Show production skill — saves me 5-10 hours per episode. I used to print hundreds of pages of transcripts and manually cut segments. Now I upload transcripts with a voice recording describing my vision, and the skill does the heavy lifting.

Donnie Piercey and Rachelle Dene Poth have some great additions to this show.

👉 Watch or listen to S5E9:
https://www.coolcatteacher.com/vibecoding/

video preview

🚀 🚀 🚀

🎙️ New on the 10 Minute Teacher Podcast

Episode 930: Inquiry-Based Learning Made Simple for K-8 with Terra Tarango

Terra is the Chief Education Officer at Van Andel Institute for Education, and she makes inquiry feel doable.

  • “Beat the Bot” activity — students figure out what humans can do that AI can't. Brilliant.
  • A kindergarten bee project that covers math, science, ELA, and SEL in five lessons.
  • Her mantra: start small. You don't have to overhaul everything.

I'll have a new episode with Karim Meghji of Code.org going up next about how to teach children about AI.

🚀 Coming Soon: Season 6 of Cool Cat Teacher Talk

Season 6 is starting! The first episode is about being beautifully human — what it means to stay human and connected in an age of AI. I can't wait for you to hear it.

And Season 6, Episode 2 is all about data-driven schools. Here's a preview of what's coming:

  • A.J. Juliani taught 150 educators to build their own AI-powered data dashboards (they were mind-blown)
  • Victoria Setaro introduced me to “warm data” vs. “cold data” — the numbers only tell half the story; the human stories behind them are where real action lives
  • Dr. Deborah Dennie (NASSP award-winner) showed how data-driven leadership starts with seeing people

As I wrote in my script: “Data-driven doesn't mean data-only. The best data-driven schools are the most human schools.”

🔒 A related note on data and security: You may have seen that Anthropic accidentally leaked Claude Code's source code via npm on March 31st. No customer data was exposed — it was a packaging error — but it's a good reminder that we all need to understand how our data flows through AI tools. If one of the largest Ai companies in the world had an accident – it is so easy to make mistakes with Data. More on this topic in the upcoming data episode.

😊 A Note of Joy

I got a lovely email from Gwendolyn Z. thanking me for the ideas about putting fun research into prompts. She called me a “joyologist.” I've never been called that before, but I'll take it! Thank you, Gwendolyn. That made my whole week.

How to Add fun to your lessons based on research I decided to take my information on the research on fun and turned it into a prompt you can use in your AI to take the research on fun and add it to a lesson plan.

👉 FREEBIE Here's the research and scroll to the bottom for the prompt. (You may have to download it and open in your browser as it is an html file.)

Speaking of April — talk to your students about Artemis II. Four humans are orbiting the moon this week. Nutella is floating in zero gravity. And if you want to dig deeper, Valerie Neal's On a Mission is a perfect read for anyone inspired by women who made space for themselves — literally.

I'm so glad to get to serve you. Thank you for reading my email and for forwarding it to your friends!

Joyfully in your service,

Vicki Davis, The “Cool Cat Teacher”

PS If you're wondering how I made the graphic at the top, I took my usual newsletter and loaded it into Google Gemini and asked it to make the heart a moon and to put Artemis II instead of the airplane and then I asked it to add a jar of floating nutella and it worked! You can do this with any of your standard headers, even your header in Google classroom to add a space inspired element to your website.

The post Nutella in Space, Vibe Coding, and Why Data-Driven Doesn’t Mean Data-Only appeared first on Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher helping educators be excellent every day. Meow!

If you're seeing this on another site, they are "scraping" my feed and taking my content to present it to you so be aware of this.


from Cool Cat Teacher Blog
https://www.coolcatteacher.com/nutella-in-space-vibe-coding-and-why-data-driven-doesnt-mean-data-only/