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July 14, 2025
5 min (est.)
ASCD Blog

Profile of an AI-Ready Graduate

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Schools need to focus on AI life skills in teaching and learning.
Technology
Illustration of students using laptops with large AI-themed screens in the background, representing AI-ready learners.
Credit: ProStockStudio / Shutterstock
Teaching artificial intelligence in education largely centers around making sure students and teachers know about AI—what it is, how it works, which tools to use, and how to fact-check responses. These AI-literacy skills are important, but if we only teach about AI we miss a critical opportunity to practice enhancing our human abilities with AI. In addition to just knowing about AI, students need to practice using AI to think deeper, create better, and solve problems more efficiently than they could on their own. 

Profile of an AI Graduate

Many schools have created portraits of a graduate—frameworks that articulate the durable skills students should have by the time they graduate (beyond the subject-area knowledge about math, science, history, etc). Adopting that approach, I’ve created a "Profile of an AI-Ready Graduate,” which was shared at the recent ISTELive 25 + 2025 ASCD Annual conference. It identifies six core roles students should be comfortable taking on—with AI—to maximize their human potential.
Profile of an AI-Ready Graduate Image 1

Learner

Students know how to use AI to set learning goals, create plans for learning new skills, identify strategies to get unstuck, and seek targeted feedback to improve performance and understanding.
AI-ready graduates know how to use AI to help them identify skills needed to meet their future learning and career goals and plan pathways for learning those skills that match their unique needs and interests. This role also involves knowing how to use AI to get “unstuck” when learning a new skill becomes overwhelming or leads to a dead end. Perhaps most importantly, being a Learner involves knowing how to seek performance feedback from AI that is immediate, specific, and actionable (e.g. suggestions for improving writing, identifying weaknesses in reasoning, assessing artistic strengths, etc). 

Researcher 

Students know how to use AI to investigate and analyze topics, evaluate claims, and compare sources of information.  
AI-ready graduates are adept at using AI as a research assistant that helps them think more comprehensively and critically about complex topics. This role moves beyond just searching for information to include investigating topics systematically, evaluating competing claims, and exploring and establishing diverse sources. Researchers understand how to use AI to identify both conflicting claims and areas of common agreement across multiple sources. They are skilled at directing AI to identify patterns within fields as well as across different fields to identify insights that are meaningful and valuable.

Synthesizer 

Students know how to use AI to synthesize, remix, and refine information into formats and levels of complexity that best meet their unique needs and capabilities. 
AI-ready graduates don’t just consume information: They know how to bring information together from various sources to increase understanding, illuminate connections, and generate new solutions. AI-ready graduates also know they don’t have to accept information that is above or below their level of understanding or not right for a given context, but instead use AI to adapt information to meet an appropriate learning level or audience needs or expectation. This includes changing media formats (audio to text, text to video, etc.) to get information in a format that is most appropriate for a given context.

Ideator

Students know how to use AI as a brainstorming partner to generate new ideas and explore a wide range of possibilities. 
AI-ready graduates use artificial intelligence to spur their own thinking, break through creative blocks, explore alternative perspectives, and generate a range of ideas they may not have been able to consider on their own. They recognize the limitations of their own perspectives and benefit from generative conversations around ideas and possibilities. They know how to prompt AI to generate new options and out-of-the-box suggestions to broaden their thinking.    

Connector 

Students know how to use AI to increase human collaboration, including overcoming language barriers and finding common ground among divergent perspectives. 
AI-ready graduates leverage artificial intelligence to facilitate deeper human connections and enhance the power of collaboration. This includes using real-time language translation to preserve cultural nuances and emotional tone, enabling people from different linguistic backgrounds to break down barriers to conversation. Connectors can use matchmaking algorithms to identify shared values and goals, making it easier to find mentors or build highly functioning teams. They also use AI to coordinate workflows, delegate tasks, and improve team member participation. Finally, they elicit diverse perspectives—including, for example, from historical figures or digital personas. 

Storyteller

Students know how to use AI to present and communicate complex ideas through text, image, audio, video, and other media. 
AI-ready graduates use artificial intelligence to enhance their ability to tell compelling stories and connect with others—sharpening their narratives, improving their presentations, and finding new ways to visualize complex concepts in formats beyond text. They might collaborate with AI to create visual metaphors for abstract ideas, or use AI to generate video to convey information in ways that resonate more powerfully with their intended audiences.   

Preparing for an AI-Integrated Future

The Profile of an AI-Ready Graduate provides a roadmap for helping students learn to use AI to enhance and build on their uniquely human capabilities. By modeling and teaching the key roles students will be expected to take on, we can better prepare them for a world in which AI will be increasingly integrated into their lives. There is no question that students need to learn about AI. But to thrive (and survive) in an AI-powered world, they also need to know how to work with AI creatively, thoughtfully, and strategically. We must shift the conversation from one of basic theoretical understanding to one of in-depth practical and creative applicability. Anything less would be limiting their future success. 
Interested in being part of this shift? Learn more about ISTE+ASCD’s pledge to prepare 200,000 teachers over the next two years to model AI life skills for students. 

AI in Schools

This innovation-focused issue of EL magazine showcases examples of how schools and educators are using AI to enhance instruction and transform the nature of their work—and student learning—for the better.

AI in Schools

Richard Culatta is an internationally recognized innovator and learning designer. As the CEO of ISTE+ASCD, Culatta is focused on supporting education changemakers to create equitable and engaging learning experiences for students around the world.

Prior to joining ISTE+ASCD, Culatta served as the Chief Innovation Officer for the state of Rhode Island. In this role, he led an initiative to make Rhode Island the first state to offer computer science in every K-12 school and created a state vision for personalized learning.

Culatta was appointed by President Obama as the Executive Director of the Office of Educational Technology for the US Department of Education. In that capacity, he led efforts to expand connectivity to schools across the country, promote personalized learning and develop the National Education Technology Plan. He also pioneered new opportunities for engagement between the Department, education leaders, and tech developers - including bringing top game designers from around the world to the White House to help re-think the design of assessments. Culatta also served as an education policy adviser to U.S. Sen. Patty Murray and a Resident Designer for the global design firm IDEO.

Richard's book Digital for Good: Raising Kids to Thrive in an Online World (HBR Press) uncovers the challenges with our current approaches to preparing young people to be effective humans in virtual spaces and presents a path to a healthier and more civil future digital world.

Culatta began his career in the classroom as a high school teacher and has coached educators and national leaders around the world on making learning more. He holds a bachelor's degree in Spanish teaching and a master's in educational psychology and technology, from Brigham Young University.

Learn More

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