Student鈥檚 Voice – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Mon, 29 Jun 2026 23:46:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Student鈥檚 Voice – 社区黑料 32 32 Opinion: As AI Advances, Student Voice Must Keep Pace聽 /article/as-ai-advances-student-voice-must-keep-pace/ Tue, 30 Jun 2026 12:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1034619 As I climbed the steps to the stage on the morning of my junior high graduation, I felt my heart racing. Just a few feet away stood a microphone and hundreds of eyes waiting for me to begin. As the commencement speaker, I had rehearsed my speech countless times, yet I had no idea this would mark the beginning of a passion for student voice. 

That experience stayed with me long after graduation. It taught me something that is becoming increasingly vital in today鈥檚 digital world: Confidence is not developed by having the perfect answer but by believing in authentic ideas. 

Many young students are losing confidence in their own ideas. It is undeniable my generation grew up behind screens, with videos and phones embedded in everyday life. As a 16-year-old high school student, I don鈥檛 consider artificial intelligence a futuristic invention but rather a simple extension of the world we already live in. That is why I believe many conversations about AI in schools are missing the bigger issue entirely. The real concern is not technology itself but what happens when student voices become overshadowed. 

Technology has not only changed the way students learn but also the way we communicate on a daily basis. Many young people have become highly skilled at digital tools, with FaceTime and Zoom becoming frequent parts of everyday life. It is a common joke that if our generation does not put their phones down, they will forget how to talk to someone on a date!聽There is immense truth behind that. As we become more accustomed to immediate responses, we are slowly losing the patience to sit with a thought.聽

About 54% of students already use AI for schoolwork, a number continuing to rise. AI can certainly help students organize their thoughts. I even used it during the brainstorming process of this piece, but the important aspect is that my writing remained a reflection of my voice. With this expanding access to knowledge, an important question remains: Where does student voice fit in? If students begin relying on AI from the moment their education begins, they risk losing the discomfort that comes from developing confidence in their own ideas. That uncomfortable part matters. 

I have personally experienced how being in an uncomfortable position can lead the mind to function in ways AI cannot replace. It was the day of a long-awaited DECA business conference, and I put on my dress and blazer, a stark contrast to the comfortable clothes I wear at school. I had recited my speech until I knew it by heart, yet during the presentation, I felt the pressure set in and my thoughts begin to blur.聽

For a moment it felt as though all my preparation disappeared, but after taking a moment to slow down, I looked back at my notes and continued. It was not the polished performance I had imagined, but by the end I had conveyed what I wanted to say. More importantly, the experience taught me something AI never could, which was how to recover in real time.

Through these experiences, I have seen how much students can grow when they are asked to use their own voices. Recognizing this, I am proud to lead a summer program in the Chicagoland area called First Voice Academy. 

Here, middle school students learn and practice public speaking in a low-stress, immersive environment. Designed to promote interpersonal connection, the program walks participants through the importance of communication and concludes with their delivering a speech on their own. Taught directly by high schoolers, the program gives younger students the opportunity to learn from peers who have faced many of the same obstacles.

I can envision a student struggling to present during a speech, but that is the key: The words are theirs. The goal is not to ignore AI, but to ensure younger generations have opportunities to develop confidence in their own ideas.聽

Artificial intelligence can polish language perfectly and respond to a question in under a second, but what it cannot do is replace a student鈥檚 voice. Confidence is gained when students believe their own thoughts are worth sharing, even when they come out wrong the first time. Students who feel they have a voice at school are seven times more motivated to learn. 

A program like First Voice Academy allows for real world experience while in a learning environment. If similar programs can be expanded into schools, more students would build interpersonal skills at a crucial point in their lives.聽

I think back to the moment I stepped up to give my graduation speech and how scared I was. All it took was to say the first word, and suddenly I felt connected with the audience. Student voice offers a perspective unlike any other, and simply needs the opportunity to be heard. Technology may help develop ideas, but true opportunity comes from nurturing one’s own voice.

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