Week 13: The AI Discovery Lab
Introduction to Generative AI
Throughout this course you have learned how to:
- control computers
- organize files
- communicate with text and images
- search for information
- write simple programs
- debug problems
- understand systems
Now we explore something new and very powerful:
Artificial Intelligence (AI).
AI tools can:
- write text
- generate images
- answer questions
- help solve problems
- help people create things faster
But there is something very important to understand.
AI is not magic.
AI does not truly “know” things the way people do. Instead, it generates responses based on patterns it has learned from large amounts of information.
The big idea this week:
AI is a tool that generates ideas, but humans must think about whether those ideas make sense.
Learning to use AI well means:
- asking good questions
- thinking critically about answers
- using AI to help creativity rather than replace thinking
All AI interactions for ages 8–12 should be supervised by an adult. Do not let learners share personal information with AI tools. Remind learners that AI can sound confident and still be wrong — always check important facts with a trusted source. AI outputs should be reviewed by a human before being trusted or shared.
- You do not need to teach every bullet on the page. Use the learning goal and one or two activities for the session you are teaching today.
- If time is short, teach one guided session well and leave the rest for later. The lessons are designed to stretch across the week.
- The independent session works best after the learner has already explored the main idea with you once.
Teacher Preparation
- Time needed: ~30–45 minutes per guided session; ~20–30 minutes for the independent session.
- Devices needed: A computer or tablet with internet access.
- Accounts: Use an adult-managed account for any AI tool. Learners should not create their own AI accounts.
- Ensure access to a generative AI tool (such as ChatGPT, Gemini, Copilot, or another conversational AI). Any conversational AI tool will work for this lesson — see Tool Alternatives for options.
- Prepare a few simple prompts to demonstrate AI behavior.
- Have paper or a whiteboard available for discussion.
- Confirm the My Projects folder exists.
- Set up a visual timer.
This week should feel curious and exploratory, not technical.
The student should leave with three ideas:
- AI can generate things
- AI can make mistakes
- humans must still think carefully
Guided Session 1
What Is AI?
Learning Goal
By the end of this session, the student can:
- analyze AI output as pattern-based rather than human understanding
- compare what AI does well with what people still need to decide or judge
- create or extend an idea using AI as a brainstorming partner
Activities
1. Ask the Student What They Think AI Is
Start with an open question:
“What do you think artificial intelligence is?”
Let the student share their thoughts.
Many children imagine robots or super-smart machines. That’s a great starting point.
Explain that AI is really a computer system trained to recognize patterns and generate responses.
2. Demonstrate AI Generating Text
Open an AI tool.
Ask it a simple question such as:
- “Tell me three interesting facts about dogs.”
- “Write a short story about a robot and a puppy.”
Read the response together.
Ask the student:
- “How do you think the computer came up with that?”
- “Do you think it knows those things or is it generating them?”
Explain that the AI is generating answers based on patterns it learned during training.
3. Generate Something Creative
Try a fun prompt together:
Examples:
- “Invent a silly animal that lives on the moon.”
- “Describe a robot that helps take care of dogs.”
Explain that AI can help generate ideas.
But the human decides whether those ideas are good.
Reflection Questions
- “What evidence makes AI seem powerful, and what evidence shows its limits?”
- Sentence starter: “AI seems powerful because… but it is limited because…”
- “How is AI pattern-making different from human understanding?”
- Sentence starter: “AI finds patterns, but a person can…”
- “When would you trust AI to help you brainstorm, and when would you question it more carefully?”
- Sentence starter: “I would trust AI to help with… but I would double-check when…”
Guided Session 2
When AI Gets Things Wrong
Learning Goal
By the end of this session, the student can:
- evaluate whether an AI response is sensible, useful, or questionable
- verify AI information by comparing it with another source or their own reasoning
- justify why AI should support thinking instead of replacing it
Activities
1. Ask AI a Tricky Question
Try asking the AI something slightly unusual or playful.
Examples:
- “Can dogs breathe on the moon?”
- “How many legs does a dragon have?”
- “What is the fastest flying sandwich?”
Discuss the response.
Ask:
“Does that answer make sense?”
Explain that AI sometimes guesses based on patterns.
2. Compare AI to Searching the Internet
Explain that using AI is similar to searching online.
Both require us to ask:
- Who made this information?
- Does it make sense?
- Should we check another source?
AI is simply another tool for exploring ideas.
Connect to something they already know:
"Remember in Week 7 when we learned that not every search result is trying to help you? And in Week 8 when we learned that polished doesn't mean true? The same rules apply to AI. Just because the AI writes a confident-sounding answer doesn't mean it's correct. Always check important facts."
For a refresher on evaluating online information, see Digital Habits & Safety.
3. Improve an AI Idea
Ask the AI to generate something creative.
Example:
Invent a new kind of robot pet.
Then ask the student:
- What do you like about that idea?
- What would you change?
- How could you make it better?
Explain that creativity often works this way.
AI gives a starting point, and people improve it.
Reflection Questions
- “What helped you decide whether an AI answer was sensible or questionable?”
- Sentence starter: “I could tell the answer was… because…”
- “How can AI support creativity without making the important decisions for us?”
- Sentence starter: “AI can help by… but the person still needs to…”
- “Why is human judgment still necessary even when AI sounds confident?”
- Sentence starter: “Even when AI sounds sure, a person should… because…”
Independent Session
AI Idea Explorer
Instruction
Use AI to explore an idea you are curious about, but evaluate the result instead of just accepting it.
After reading the AI response, ask yourself:
- Does this make sense?
- What parts seem useful?
- What parts need to be checked, changed, or improved?
Then create your own version by writing, drawing, or expanding the idea into something better.
Be ready to explain what you kept, what you changed, and why.
Save any drawings or writing in:
My Projects → Experiments
Skills Reinforced
- analyzing AI as a tool rather than a thinker
- asking stronger questions to test or extend ideas
- evaluating generated information for usefulness and accuracy
- developing ideas creatively with human judgment
Setup
- AI tool open (adult-supervised account)
- drawing or writing tool available
- access to My Projects → Experiments
- visual timer
🔄 Simplify or Extend
Simplify:
- Limit the session to just 2–3 AI prompts and focus on the question: “Does this answer make sense?”
- Use a pre-written list of prompts instead of asking the learner to create their own.
- Focus on one big idea: AI generates based on patterns, not understanding.
Extend:
- Ask the learner to create a “Fact vs. Fiction” chart — test the AI with questions they already know the answers to and record what it gets right and wrong.
- Have the learner compare AI responses to the same question asked twice — do the answers change?
- Challenge the learner to write a short guide: “Three things to check before trusting an AI answer.”
💾 Save This Week’s Artifact
Save your AI interaction notes, screenshots of prompts and responses, or written observations about AI accuracy to your portfolio folder (My Projects → Experiments). Include at least one example where you identified something the AI got wrong or something you improved. Label it with the date.
✅ Success Indicators
By the end of this week, look for evidence that the learner can:
- Explain that AI generates responses based on patterns, not true understanding.
- Give an example of something AI got wrong or something that didn’t make sense.
- Describe why AI answers should be checked with a trusted source before being trusted.
- Explain that AI is a tool that helps people think, not a replacement for thinking.
- Identify at least one way AI could be helpful and one way it could be misleading.
- Use phrases like "I need to check that" or "that doesn't sound right" when reviewing AI output.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) • Generative AI • Prompt • Pattern • Output • Verify • Hallucination (when AI confidently states something false)
See the Glossary for definitions.