Teacher, Textbook, or AI?
Over the past few years, AI has quietly inserted itself into the language learning process. The question is: has it changed yours?
Are you using AI to practice speaking? To improve your writing? To ask grammar questions you donât want to ask in class? Maybe even to explore the history or cultural background of the language youâre studying?
That leads to a bigger question: has AI replaced the textbook?
A traditional textbook is static. Itâs written, printed, and used as-is for the semester. AI, on the other hand, evolves. It responds to your specific questions. It adjusts to your level. In that sense, it feels like a textbook that updates in real time.
But if AI becomes the ânew textbook,â what happens to the teacher?
I donât think the teacherâs role has changed as dramatically as some people assume. Guidance, structure, feedback, and accountability still matter. If anything, the presence of AI may make those roles even more important.
The real challenge is figuring out how these constantly evolving language models should be used in the classroom. As a supplement? A practice tool? A drafting assistant? Something else entirely?
So Iâm curious: when youâre learning now, what are you relying on most?
Or have you gone fully AI?