Modesto City Schools has introduced comprehensive artificial intelligence guidelines for classroom use, becoming the only district in Stanislaus County with a dedicated AI committee. The district will launch parent training sessions next month to help families support their children with the same AI tools being adopted in schools, marking a proactive approach to educational technology integration.
What you should know: The district formed a 20-member AI committee including students, staff, and parents to establish responsible AI policies across all schools.
- The committee developed a guidebook titled “Modesto City Schools AI Exploration: Navigating Our Digital Future” along with brochures and posters for distribution to school sites.
- Since 2023, 776 staff members — including one-third of the district’s teachers — have completed AI training programs.
- The school board unanimously approved policy revisions that include specific language governing AI use in educational settings.
AI tools being adopted: The district is implementing distinct AI platforms for staff and students with different access levels and controls.
- For staff: PowerSchool PowerBuddy AI, MagicSchool for lesson creation, Writable for student feedback, Google Gemini and NotebookLM, Microsoft Copilot, ChatGPT, and Claude for various educational tasks.
- For students: MagicSchool and PowerSchool PowerBuddy for Learning, both requiring explicit teacher or parent permission and operating under teacher-controlled formats.
- Staff must follow the “80-20 rule” — allowing AI to handle 80% of a task while using 20% professional judgment to refine outputs.
The efficiency gains: District analysis shows significant time-saving potential for educators and improved learning outcomes for students.
- AI could save teachers an average of 5.9 hours weekly from their current 37.4-hour workload — equivalent to six additional weeks over a school year.
- Lesson planning and preparation time could be reduced by seven to 10 hours per week while helping reduce teacher burnout.
- AI-powered personalized learning systems have shown potential to improve student outcomes by up to 30% compared with traditional methods.
Privacy and safety guardrails: The district emphasizes strict data protection and ethical use requirements for all AI implementations.
- Staff are prohibited from sharing personally identifiable information with AI platforms and must verify all AI outputs for accuracy, bias, and relevance.
- Students must fact-check AI outputs, properly cite sources including AI tools themselves, and cannot share personal or confidential information about classmates.
- AI cannot be used for harmful, deceptive, or inappropriate purposes under district guidelines.
What they’re saying: District leaders and union representatives emphasized different priorities for AI integration.
- “The consensus is that AI should be a tool to lighten workloads, not to replace people,” said Fawn Peterson, chapter president of the California School Employees Association.
- Board President Abel Maestas warned against complacency: “We think we’re ahead, and we’re not,” noting how rapidly AI technology continues to evolve.
- Matthew Ketchum, director of educational technology, shared a practical example where AI could help nutrition staff explain food allergies to students through personalized, grade-appropriate stories.
Legislative context: California has enacted multiple bills requiring AI integration and literacy in K-12 education.
- Senate Bill 1288 (September 2024) requires the state superintendent to convene a working group on AI in public schools, which served as the model for Modesto City Schools’ committee.
- Assembly Bill 2876 (October 2024) integrates AI literacy into California’s K-12 curriculum across English, math, science, and history subjects.
- The state expects to release AI guidance early next year, followed by model policies for districts in July and final recommendations in January 2027.
AI Integration at Modesto Schools to Include Parent Training