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Teachers, parents and even students trash disastrous impact of AI in schools: ‘My heart breaks for this generation’

New York City's Department of Education has invested over $1 billion in technology contracts, including $530 million on Chromebooks, as teachers, parents, and students report that AI programs like Amira hinder learning, normalize cheating, and fail students with disabilities. One mother said her hearing-impaired son was forced to use an AI reading program that repeatedly flagged his pronunciation, and the school initially refused to let him opt out. Critics warn the massive spending on tech firms is undermining education and student self-reliance.

read9 min views1 publishedJun 26, 2026
Teachers, parents and even students trash disastrous impact of AI in schools: ‘My heart breaks for this generation’
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Add The New York Post on Google A few months ago, a third-grade student in Brooklyn was assigned — like the rest of his classmates — an AI-powered reading program called Amira.

He was already reading at a sixth-grade level, but he also suffered from hearing loss.

Amira, the AI program, repeatedly flagged his pronunciation — which was sometimes slightly off, due to his hearing impairment — directing him to practice simple words again and again.

“It was having him reread words like ‘cat’ and ‘bat’ and ‘dog,'” his mother, who wanted to remain anonymous, told The Post.

“He could read them. He just couldn’t pronounce them the way the bot needed him to.”

When she tried to opt her son out of the program, she said both the school and district officials initially told her no, and his feedback improved the technology for future students.

“I never consented to allow my child to train an AI chatbot,” she continued. “I never consented to allow my child to be used in this manner at all.”

The question of technology in school classrooms is a thorny one.

There is no doubt that staying abreast of the latest technology is key — it is already shaping jobs and industries, and today’s young students will need to be fully literate in it.

But swathes of teachers, parents, and even students are raising concerns that technology and AI in the classroom are hindering learning, normalizing cheating — all while the DOE sinks over $1 billion into tech firms.

One parent told The Post that her child used a school-issued device to screenshot math problems and run them through programs like Google Lens to receive answers in seconds.

Similarly, essays can be drafted by chatbots before a child writes a single sentence with their hand.

One teacher revealed that their school has begun removing laptops from classrooms altogether because they are disruptive and distract students from learning.

“These kids are not going to be self-reliant,” Aixa Rodriguez, an English teacher at Motion Picture Technical High School, told The Post.

Locked into colossal contracts

New York City’s Department of Education has over $1 billion in technology contracts. The Chromebook initiative alone — which involved issuing a device to almost every New York City student — has become one of the Department of Education’s largest technology investments.

When they were first adopted, the devices were a vital classroom aid — children could complete their homework on them, attend remote school, and use them for research.

But as search engines evolved, and AI technology became ubiquitous, some DOE teachers told The Post they questioned the enormous investment versus the impact on learning.

City records reviewed by The Post show New York City has committed roughly $530 million across two Chromebook contracts with CDW Government since 2014.

The second contract, originally awarded at $13.8 million in 2017, was repeatedly renewed and amended until its authorized value reached nearly $497 million by 2025—a roughly 36-fold increase.

CDW, which holds the city’s only contracts specifically designated for Chromebooks, was renewed without competitive bidding.

City records show about $310 million has been spent against under that contract so far.

The spending has only continued to grow. Last year, the city announced a separate $327 million initiative to distribute 350,000 LTE-connected Chromebooks, including roughly $200 million for T-Mobile cellular service to ensure students could connect even without home internet.

According to data, only a fraction of the LTE-enabled devices purchased reached students.

And the city also has a $626M contract with Apple to provide students with iPads, which was revealed in 2020 — and slammed as a waste of time and money.

This enormous spending comes as English Language Arts and Math proficiency is falling across the board in NYC.

In fact, in 2025, the city lowered the proficiency bar in state tests — meaning while the results technically showed improvement, the standards they were reaching did not.

And even then, more than 40% of city kids failed the math and reading exams.

Promise versus productivity

For Principal Melessa Avery, a veteran educator who heads up the Brooklyn-based PS 273 elementary school serving approximately 300 children, many of whom are financially insecure, the school-issued devices are a “second teacher.” “Kids are riding trains and buses, and they can learn,” the Brooklyn principal told The Post.

“Anything that they misunderstood during actual live teachings, they can go on these devices and learn,” she added.

But even with the benefits, PS 273’s principal told The Post that access to technology doesn’t mean accelerated learning.

“I wrote to the provost of the state aid department, and I explained to him my concerns about the devices and the technology,” Avery said.

“These babies are 8 years old, and you have them writing essays, thinking on a computer. That is a no-no.”

She worries that not being taught handwriting or how to organize their thoughts on paper is setting students back.

She tries to use devices only in short intervals to avoid “flooding” young students with technology.

“AI for an elementary school student would be kind of like saying, ‘Here’s a cup of alcohol,'” she said.

When thinking stops

Many teachers told The Post that even though the school devices are supposedly blocked from apps like Google Gemini, AI programs are baked into search engines.

Google Lens is still available, and other programs are automatically loaded despite security preferences, making it much harder to police the classroom in everything from behavior to learning.

Rodriguez, who teaches many students for whom English is a second language, sees students defaulting to AI apps like ChatGPT and Gemini — on personal or school-issued devices — to quickly complete work, often bypassing critical thinking.

“You’re supposed to generate your own idea. You’re not supposed to put it in Gemini and get everything out,” she said.

“I have kids who write with words that I know are not theirs.”

Both anecdotal and reported data have shown increased use of digital learning tools, and AI has contributed to regressions in students’ development and learning.

Janice Torres, a parent coordinator and PTA board member at PS 273, noted an increase in children entering school with dexterity and literacy issues coinciding with AI use.

“We’re seeing a spike in speech development delays because of the iPads,” Torres told The Post.

A middle school math teacher in Brooklyn, who wanted to remain anonymous, told The Post that she has started to remove Chromebooks and devices during class, as children were falling behind and not paying attention.

“It breaks my heart for this generation,” she said of the proliferation of computer-based learning.

In her classroom, she shifted the focus back to handwritten problem solving and saw immediate improvement.

Longtime education advocate Leonie Haimson says the lack of transparency around AI is as concerning as the technology itself, with parents reporting that Gemini has interrupted students during reading and math assignments by offering assistance.

“What people have told me is that Gemini pops in and says, ‘Can I help you?'” Haimson said. “That is totally destructive of kids’ ability to learn the skills they need to succeed in life.”

“There are no peer-reviewed studies showing AI has a positive impact on learning,” she adds. “Many studies show the opposite.”

Students against AI

When it comes to older students, AI is sometimes flat-out rejected.

When Motion Picture Technical High School’s Parent-Teacher Association hosted an after-school workshop this spring on how artificial intelligence could transform filmmaking, it was led by a paid AI consultant hired by the school’s principal.

Students quickly took to Instagram, blasting what they saw as the hypocrisy of a film school encouraging technology they feared could replace the very jobs and creative skills they were being trained for.

“Wdym youre gonna promote something that is gonna kill the industry you’re teaching children to work in,” one student commented on Instagram.

“What is the point of a film school then if you’re just gonna push out the idea of a computer?”

During the presentation, the consultant showed AI-generated deepfake videos of the principal.

“It creeped everybody out,” Rodriguez told The Post.

Rodriguez noted the hypocrisy of schools that lack often the basic resources to teach students to think independently, spending big on AI consultants.

“You don’t have a librarian in the building,” she said. “We need librarians who can help kids research properly.”

Holding the DOE to account #

Haimson also believes the city has far more control over AI than officials acknowledge.

“The DOE has incredible influence and power over the school system,” she said. “They can reject the use of AI if they want to.”

She also notes they have dodged questions about exactly how many devices have AI installed — and at a city council hearing this week, delayed releasing comprehensive AI guidelines for schools.

“At the hearing, DoE officials offered no timeline when the revised AI guidelines would be ready, and no proposals as to how their privacy vetting would be improved despite the findings of the scathing Comptroller audit,” Haimson told The Post.

At the same time, tracking exactly how much the city spends on Chromebooks — and for what technology — has also become increasingly difficult.

According to a recent report by the City Comptroller, the newest Chromebook purchases are made through broader IT master agreements that don’t identify specific products or the breakdown of vendors on individual delivery orders.

The Department of Education defended its approach, saying student access to AI tools is tightly controlled. “Earlier this year, New York City Public Schools took initial steps to put guardrails in place while developing student AI guidance in partnership with families, educators, and communities,” a DOE spokesperson told The Post.

According to the department, Google’s Gemini platform is disabled by default for students and is currently available to high schools participating in a pilot program at the request of individual principals.

Officials said Google Lens and Google’s separate AI Mode have also been disabled for students.

The DOE acknowledged reports that Gemini could automatically reinstall after being removed and said this concern contributed to the decision to block AI Mode for students.

Officials said the pilot is intended to help evaluate the technology before broader guidance is finalized and argued that AI can serve as “a thought partner for students and staff” when used responsibly.

“There’s no tool that can replace the role of a teacher,” the spokesperson said.

Principal Avery doesn’t believe technology is going away, nor does she think it should.

But as schools race to adopt artificial intelligence, she believes educators still have a responsibility to protect the fundamentals.

“It’s a catch-22,” she said. “In moderation, especially for my babies.”

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