As artificial intelligence reshapes our world, educators are called to prepare students not just with technical skills, but with the curiosity, creativity, and human-centered abilities to thrive alongside it. This article explores the Profile of an AI-Ready Graduate and offers practical classroom strategies, routines, and AI-driven prompts to bring its six traits — Learner, Researcher, Synthesizer, Storyteller, Connector, and Ideator — to life.
In an evolving world that is starting to be shaped by the rise of artificial intelligence, our classroom spaces must remain places of curiosity, connection, and thoughtful creation. At the recent ASCD + ISTE 2025 Conference, the Profile of an AI-Ready Graduate was introduced by Richard Culatta, not as a checklist of tech skills, but as a human-centered guide for how students can thrive as thought partners alongside AI. Recently, Culatta expanded on these ideas and components of an AI-ready graduate in an ASCD blog post I highly recommend reading.
As educators across the globe continue to reflect on how to integrate future-ready skills — alongside social, emotional, and academic development — they’re also considering how to bring technology into classrooms in accessible and meaningful ways. From my own experience, I’ve come to realize that many educators are already engaging in this work through their district’s Profile of a Graduate, and now they’re beginning or continuing to layer in the responsible work of the integration of AI. It’s more than an opportunity; it’s an obligation. Because those who understand how to use AI thoughtfully and ethically will hold the leverage not just in the workforce but in shaping the future.
These six traits seen below (Learner, Researcher, Synthesizer, Storyteller, Connector, and Ideator) remind us that our role isn’t to replace traditional instruction with AI, but to integrate it with care, creativity, and purpose.
Below, I am offering some suggestions for how each profile component can come to life in the classroom through instructional practice, Project Zero Visible Thinking routines from the Harvard Graduate School of Education, thoughtfully designed AI prompts, and meaningful assessment pathways that offer multiple ways for students to demonstrate their learning.
I want to emphasize that these are simply suggestions, meant to spark thinking and reflection as we explore what this work could look like in our own classrooms. I encourage you to read Richard Culatta’s blog to help frame and deepen your thinking.
Uses AI to synthesize and remix information into formats and levels of complexity that best meet their unique needs and capabilities.
Uses AI to present and communicate complex ideas through text, image, audio, video, and other media.
Uses AI to increase human collaboration including overcoming language barriers and finding common ground among divergent perspectives.
Uses AI as a brainstorming partner to generate new ideas and explore a wide range of possible solutions.
This is the moment for us to lean in with curiosity, model discernment, and teach with empathy. When we combine intentional instructional design with the thoughtful integration of AI, we’re not just preparing students for what’s next — we’re preparing them to lead it.
AI may be evolving fast but so are our students and we are ready for this work.
About the Author:
Lauren Kaufman is an educator whose professional passion is to empower teachers to lead and develop lifelong literacy practices in all learners. She is currently a district leader in Long Island, New York, and has served as an assistant principal, instructional coach, elementary classroom teacher, literacy specialist, and K-12 new teacher mentor coordinator. Lauren has led teams developing a comprehensive approach to literacy, has provided educators with job-embedded professional learning, and has guided new teachers with acclimating to a school system. She is the author of The Leader Inside: Stories of Mentorship to Inspire the Leader Within and has contributed to several educational publications. You can connect with Lauren on X, Instagram, or through her website.