Episode 5- The AI-Ready School: What It Really Takes.
Description
In this episode of Future-Proof Education: AI and Beyond, we engage in a practical and timely conversation with Tim Howes, Deputy Executive Director at ACES in New Haven, Connecticut. Tim brings decades of experience as an educator, principal, and executive leader to unpack what it really means to build an AI-ready school—beyond the buzzwords and into the real work of culture change, systems thinking, and purposeful implementation.
Key Topics Discussed:
Defining the AI-Ready School:
Tim shares how being AI-ready isn't about flashy tools or tech upgrades—it's about cultivating the vision, systems, and school-wide mindset to support AI integration as a learning and operational tool.
Culture Before Tools:
Why lasting AI implementation begins with leadership modeling curiosity, vulnerability, and a growth mindset—especially for educators who may not see themselves as "tech people."
Misconceptions About AI in Schools:
Addressing fears that AI will replace teachers or require major overhauls. Tim reframes AI as a scaffold, not a silver bullet, and reminds us that educators still sit at the heart of learning.
Student Voice and Co-Design:
How inviting students into the conversation helps make AI adoption more relevant and equitable. Tim shares a cafeteria redesign story that illustrates the power of listening to student needs.
Overlooked Systems That Block AI Readiness:
From outdated procurement processes to siloed student data, Tim breaks down the "unsexy" infrastructure that can either stall or support meaningful AI adoption.
Generational Shifts in Tech Fluency:
Why today's students—digital natives—are often learning AI alongside their teachers, making it essential to build collaborative, exploratory classroom environments.
Getting Started on a Budget:
Tim outlines practical first steps for schools with limited funding—like piloting free AI tools and focusing investment on professional learning rather than hardware.
Why Now Is the Time to Begin:
Waiting for the "perfect" moment or tool delays the inevitable. The earlier educators engage with AI, the more confident and effective they'll be in guiding students through it.











