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As AI tools make their way into students’ devices, one thing is clear: educators need support in using artificial intelligence in meaningful and responsible ways. Whether you’re teaching STEM, ELA, social studies, or digital citizenship, these AI classroom activities are designed to engage students while building critical thinking, tech fluency, and ethical awareness. 

We’ve grouped activities by learning goals, included prep tips, and linked to Learning.com resources that can help you scaffold these lessons with confidence. 

Critical Thinking & Problem Solving 

Play AI-Powered 20 Questions 

Grades: 3–8
Subjects: ELA, Science, Social Studies
Tech Needed: Any device with chatbot access (ChatGPT, Copilot, Gemini) 

Students try to stump an AI by thinking of an object, person, or place and letting the AI guess using yes/no questions. Have students reflect on the accuracy of the guesses and how the AI “thinks.” 

Why it works: 

  • Introduces machine learning logic 
  • Builds questioning and deductive reasoning skills 
  • Opens a discussion on AI accuracy 

Add depth: Ask students to compare the AI’s reasoning to a human’s. What assumptions did it make? Where did it fail? 

 Support this with a digital citizenship lesson about how algorithms process information. 

Digital Citizenship & Ethical Use 

Use AI as a Writing Coach 

Grades: 5–12
Subjects: ELA, Social Studies
Tech Needed: ChatGPT or similar Large Language Model (LLM) tool 

Instead of asking AI to write full essays, students paste their own writing into a chatbot and ask for revision tips, tone suggestions, or grammar feedback. 

Why it works: 

  • Encourages self-editing over shortcutting 
  • Builds awareness of tool misuse 
  • Reinforces the writing process 

Prompt idea: “Give me 3 ways to improve this argument,” or “Does this make sense to a reader?” 

Wrap up with a lesson on responsible tech use and discuss when it’s appropriate to use tools like AI in classwork. 

Math & Data Fluency 

Budget Building with AI 

Grades: 6–12
Subjects: Math, Economics, Financial Literacy
Tech Needed: AI chatbot, spreadsheet tool (e.g., Google Sheets) 

Students prompt AI to help them build a monthly budget for a fictional teen or local adult. Once complete, they visualize expenses using pie charts or bar graphs. 

Why it works: 

  • Blends math, real-world problem-solving, and digital tool use 
  • Sparks conversations around money and lifestyle choices 
  • Practice spreadsheet skills 

Extension: Ask students to compare budgets across different cities and explain how the cost of living impacts them. 

Use this alongside spreadsheet skills lessons in EasyTech. 

Creative Expression & Media Literacy  

AI Art Style Challenge 

Grades: 4–12
Subjects: Art, History, Media Literacy
Tech Needed: DALL·E, Craiyon, Bing Image Creator 

Students generate art of a chosen subject (e.g., “a treehouse”) in multiple art styles: cubism, impressionism, abstract, etc. Then they analyze the results and compare them to traditional artists. 

Why it works: 

  • Teaches visual literacy and art history 
  • Prompts creative prompts and critical thinking 
  • Opens ethical discussions around AI-generated media 

Prompt idea: “Create a sunflower in the style of Van Gogh vs. Picasso.” 

Follow with lessons on media analysis and copyright. 

Computer Science & Tech Skills  

Build a Simple Chatbot 

Grades: 5–12
Subjects: Computer Science, ELA, STEM
Tech Needed: Scratch or Python IDE 

Students create their own chatbot using block coding or basic scripting. They define questions and responses around a theme (e.g., “Ask me about recycling”) and test them with peers. 

 Why it works: 

  • Teaches logic, syntax, and user experience design 
  • Connects coding to real-world tech 
  • Engages tech-curious students with hands-on creation 

 Pair with EasyTech coding modules for scaffolded instruction. 

BONUS: Responsible AI Research Projects  

Ask students to research and present on real-world AI use cases in medicine, education, transportation, or entertainment. Have them evaluate benefits, risks, and how bias can affect outcomes. 

Why it works: 

  • Builds research and presentation skills 
  • Connects classroom learning to current events 
  • Reinforces ethical thinking 

Wrap with a lesson on evaluating online sources and digital literacy. 

For more ideas, tools, and guidance for leveraging AI in your classroom, check out our one-stop AI Resource Center for educators.

Bring It All Together with EasyTech 

You don’t need to be an AI expert to help your students explore these tools safely and meaningfully.  

The EasyTech Digital Literacy Curriculum provides structured, age-appropriate lessons on: 

  • Responsible tech use 
  • Online safety 
  • Cyberbullying and digital ethics 
  • Keyboarding, coding, and more 

It’s everything you need to prepare students for a tech-driven future, while staying grounded in responsible learning. 

Request a demo to get started.