Skip to main content
📰ArticleAI Detection

‘Everyone now kind of sounds the same’: How AI is changing college classes

AI in Education EditorialUpdated July 14, 20261 min readRead source
‘Everyone now kind of sounds the same’: How AI is changing college classes
🇺🇸US👨‍🎓Students🎯Ethics & Detection🌍Global👩‍🏫Teachers🏛️Administrators+6 more

Ad Feedback Health Wellness 13 min read ‘Everyone now kind of sounds the same’: How AI is changing college classes By Asuka Koda Updated Apr 4, 2026, 10:13 AM ET PUBLISHED Apr 4, 2026, 6:00 AM ET Some students are typing in professors' questions into AI chatbots and using the outputs as their talking points in class. Illustration by Leah Abucayan/CNN AI Student life See all topics Facebook Tweet Email Link Threads Link Copied!

Analysis & Perspectives

People Also Ask

What are the top AI tools for teachers in 2025?
Leading AI tools for teachers in 2025 include Magic School AI for lesson planning, Diffit for text adaptation, Curipod for interactive presentations, Mizou for safe AI chat for students, and Brisk Teaching as a Chrome extension for rapid feedback. Most offer free tiers for individual teachers.
Are AI tools for teachers free to use?
Many AI tools for teachers offer free individual plans. Magic School AI, Diffit, and Curipod are free for classroom use. Premium plans unlock collaboration features, higher usage limits, or school-wide deployment. Districts can often negotiate bulk licensing that makes paid tiers affordable per teacher.
How do AI tools save teachers time?
AI tools reduce teacher workload by drafting lesson plans in seconds, generating differentiated versions of the same activity, creating quiz questions from any text, and summarizing lengthy documents. Teachers report saving several hours per week on administrative tasks by using AI for first drafts that they then edit and personalize.
What training do teachers need to use AI tools effectively?
Effective AI use requires teachers to understand prompt engineering basics, recognize AI hallucinations, and apply critical evaluation skills. Many states now offer free professional development workshops on AI; organizations like ISTE and ASCD have published free guidance frameworks for AI literacy in teaching practice.