What To Do With AI
EduGems- created by Eric Curts
@LisaBerghoff
It's not just us, living in the education space, that are being inundated with AI powered products. In every possible category, AI is finding its way and creeping into some of the most unlikely places. AI enhanced bottled water? AI powered bird feeder? AI designed perfume? Yes, these all exist. When we are confronted with the ridiculous it is easy to want to turn away, excuse it all as a marketing scheme, and go back to doing things the way we have for the past 5, 10, or even 20 years. I have the benefit of many years of life experience and I can confidently say that absolutely nothing is all good or all bad. I'm open to being challenged on that if you want to have a conversation. Many of the educational tools that we are seeing very much rely on sound pedagogical practices, clear learning goals, and high expectations. As Gemini is quickly rising to the top as the generative ai tool of choice for education, (we'll see if it stays there), you might be wondering what it is that you are meant to do with it.
I'm excited to share with you a site that was created to help you.
It's called EduGems and it was made by my friend and colleague, Eric Curts.
What Is A Gem?
Gemini is the generative AI tool created by Google and it meets our privacy standards so that means that it won't use your information to train its models. It also has a pedagogical lens that makes it ideal for teaching and learning. A Gem is a pre-made prompt that can be saved so you can use it over and over again. There are some pre-made gems that you can find when you go to Gemini. You can also create your own. Gems that are created can be shared with others. While in Gemini, you will see Gems in the left side panel. Click to open it and take a look at what is already there.
What Is EduGems?
EduGems is a site built by the amazing Eric Curts from Ohio. He's smart, a great teacher, and an all around great guy. He built several Gemini Gems designed for educators and he put them all on this site. When you click on one of the links, you will see a link to try out the Gem, another link to copy the Gem, and then also a short description. When you make your own copy, you also have the opportunity to edit and tweak the Gem to make sure it fits your needs. These custom prompts can turn your Gemini into an AI assistant that will do what you want without needing to be a perfect "prompt engineer".
He has the Gems organized by categories: curriculum, literacy, student activities, assessment, support, and professional tasks. Because he's Eric, he also has a tab for his tutorials if you want to learn more. He also has a form where you can submit your own Gems for sharing on his site. More collaboration, less frustration, that is the way to win at this AI game.
Just go to edugems.ai/home to check them out.
Here is the Bell Ringer Gem in action:
Want to learn how to make your own gems? Want to talk about AI and appropriate use? Want help talking to your students about AI? I'm here for all of it! Feel free to reach out. I'm happy to help.


















