AI in the Classroom: Opportunities and Risks for Students with Special Education Needs

The OECD’s latest report, produced with research contributions from the National AI Institute for Exceptional Education, the Learning Engineering Virtual Institute, and European university consortia, makes a persuasive argument that artificial intelligence could be transformative in supporting students with special education needs, provided it is rolled out responsibly. Students with disabilities remain among the most disadvantaged in terms of education and employment across the OECD, with girls and women facing even greater inequities. Although mainstreaming children with disabilities into general classrooms has been shown to improve both academic and social outcomes without harming peers, the stubborn persistence of achievement gaps demands fresh solutions. Against this backdrop, the report asks a crucial question: can AI bridge those divides without worsening risks of bias, privacy breaches, or environmental burdens?

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Student shines thanks to accessibility support she receives at CSU

When Kennedy Reister was very young, doctors thought she might be blind or deaf.

Eventually, she was diagnosed with conditions that doctors said would keep her from going to college. They said she’d be lucky to finish high school and might be capable of a career in cosmetology.

But the Littleton native made it to Colorado State University, where she is excelling thanks to the accessibility resources and support that the university provides.

At age 4, Reister’s parents learned that she had dyscalculia, an inability to do basic math; dysgraphia, which limits her handwriting ability; and dyslexia. From fifth through eighth grade, she attended Denver Academy, a school that is well known for providing a specialized education to those with disabilities.

“That was the best thing that ever happened to me,” Reister said.

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Applied biostatistics for clinical reasoning how work around our dyscalculia

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Maths Anxiety, Dyscalculia, and the Role of Safe Talk

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How the use of manipulatives can help dyscalculia

See in the link below how cleverly AI answered the question about how manipulatives can help dyscalculia.

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