Beyond Tool Proficiency: Reflections on AI Integration Models
Source: Educating AI / Nick Potkalitsky Substack
Author: Nick Potkalitsky
Original source: https://nickpotkalitsky.substack.com/p/beyond-tool-proficiency-reflections
Private backup: the full article text is archived in the private repository at archives/articles/nickpotkalitsky-substack-com-beyond-tool-proficiency-reflections.source.md. It is not published on the public Quartz site.
Summary
Potkalitsky contrasts reactive U.S. AI-in-education adoption with more systematic approaches he observed in South Korea and Southeast Asia. He argues that meaningful AI integration requires infrastructure, teacher capacity, monitoring systems, digital tutors, and long-term institutional planning rather than individual teacher heroics or surface-level tool training. The article also argues that AI literacy must move beyond prompt proficiency toward reasoning, evaluation, memory, communication, collaboration, and metacognitive capacity. The lesson for schools is that readiness is a system property, not just an individual skill level.
Big ideas
- District AI work is a long-term redesign project
- Schools should start with learning values before choosing AI tools
- AI literacy has to be taught inside real subjects
Claims
- District AI implementation needs living guidance and teacher-led redesign
- AI literacy takes system capacity, not just tool access
Key evidence and examples
- The article cites South Korean investments in digital classroom infrastructure, AI textbook monitoring and digital tutors, and teacher AI capacity-building.
- Examples include device access, Wi-Fi and server upgrades, district IT support, and AI textbook monitoring.
- Potkalitsky contrasts infrastructure-backed integration with reactive, feelings-driven, underfunded adoption.
- Southeast Asian educators are presented as sharing an emphasis on intentional preparation even where infrastructure is limited.
Education relevance
Strong relevance for K-12 AI policy, district implementation, teacher professional learning, infrastructure planning, equity, and AI literacy curriculum.