‘Half the city underwater’: One million affected by northern Nigeria floods – Al Jazeera

‘Half the city underwater’: One million affected by northern Nigeria floods – Al Jazeera

It’s the worst such flooding in the northeastern city of Maiduguri in 30 years, authorities say.
Devastating floods in northeastern Nigeria have submerged entire residential areas, displaced tens of thousands of people, and forced zoo animals to escape into the streets.
At least 30 people have died in the floods, officials said. However, the death toll is likely to rise as authorities are still scrambling to rescue thousands of others feared trapped in their homes.
The floods hit Borno State early this week after a dam impounding a regional river burst its banks. The heavy surge of water buried half the state capital, Maiduguri, damaging buildings and infrastructure.
Authorities say some one million people are affected, of which about 200,000 are displaced.
Floods are not uncommon in northern Nigeria. However, experts say Maiduguri is seeing its worst flood in 30 years.
The affected region is the heart of a 15-year armed rebellion led by Boko Haram that has already seen millions of displaced people living in camps, making them particularly vulnerable. Maiduguri also serves as a hub for humanitarian operations.
Here’s what to know about what caused the floods and how officials are responding:
Authorities say the floods were caused by the flow of excessive rainwater amid the rainy season, which lasts from June to September in the West African country.
The Alau Dam, located in the Konduga community just a few kilometres outside Maiduguri, burst its banks on Monday after being overwhelmed by the heavy rainfall, officials say.
The dam was built in 1986 to help farmers in Maiduguri with irrigation. In many instances, it also helps control flooding from the Ngadda River, which on occasion gets higher-than-normal inflows from water sources that trace back to the massive Lake Chad.
In 1994, heavy rains caused Alau to break, inundating Maiduguri and its surrounding areas. In 2012, the dam broke and flooded communities nearby. The number of those affected in 1994 remains unclear, while a government report said multiple flood events across several states in 2012 killed 363 people and displaced 3.8 million.
Thousands of people are still trapped in buildings and on trees in flood-affected areas, Al Jazeera’s Ahmed Idris said, reporting from Maiduguri. To exit their homes, people must use canoes, which are not readily available in most places.
In many places, water levels have not receded. Although authorities are now helping with search and rescue, initially survivors were forced to wait for hours and were mostly helped by volunteers with minimal resources.
“People were going into the water with bare hands, very little equipment, to help try and save people from drowning,” Idris said on Thursday. “In one location we went to, the head of the rescue operation – a local volunteer group – told us they were able as of yesterday to save 200 people who were stranded in their own homes. Some were on treetops, some were on rooftops, some were clinging virtually to anything they could lay their hands on.”
Authorities are using boats for rescue operations. Crowds of people also packed onto huge military trucks that were deployed for a rescue operation on Wednesday.
Officials have recovered “many” bodies, Idris said, without giving any number. One of them was baby Humayrah, who waited with her family to be rescued for 36 hours, after seeking shelter on a boat. The boat capsized, causing the baby to drown.
Damaged septic tanks and flooded graveyards are also spurring fears of a rapid spread of infectious diseases, even as officials scramble to find shelter for those affected.
Leading hospitals in the state, including the 1,305-bed University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital – the largest in northeast Nigeria, are also flooded.
“I have been in this hospital for the last 37 years and I have never seen something like this,” Ahmed Ahidjo, the chief medical director of the hospital, told Al Jazeera on Thursday.
“The whole of the ground floor and the centres – we have about 14 specialised centres in the hospital – they are all flooded and some of the machines they are very, very expensive … all of these machines are submerged in water.”
The hospital can still conduct emergency operations on the upper levels, but it has no electricity and has been forced to suspend admissions, Ahidjo added, as the sewage system has burst open and could infect patients.

Another concern is wild animals swimming in the floodwaters. Officials said the flood either killed or washed away 80 percent of the animals in the Sanda Kyarimi Park Zoo in Maiduguri.
In a statement, the zoo authorities confirmed that dangerous animals had escaped, and urged residents to be careful. “Some deadly animals have been washed away into our communities, like crocodiles and snakes,” the statement read.
It is unclear how many animals were there in the zoo. It housed a wide array of wildlife, including endangered elephants and lions, as well as, hyenas, crocodiles, and snakes.
In videos posted on social media, an ostrich that appeared to have escaped from the zoo pranced around in the streets. Officials said they had managed to rescue and return the animal.
Animals escape from the Zoo as Maiduguri faces the worst flood since 1994. pic.twitter.com/FMQwmys0wH
— Nigeria Today (@NigeriasToday) September 10, 2024

Many in Borno State, and much of northern Nigeria, were already in the throes of a punishing food emergency, amid high inflation. Malnutrition cases have surged in the region as the lean season ends, with 4.4 million people lacking food, according to the World Food Programme.
The ongoing war waged by Boko Haram also means hundreds of thousands of people live in tents in camps meant for internally displaced people (IDPs) across Maiduguri and depend on food from aid organisations.
“Half of the city is now underwater. Now what is happening also in the camps is that people are really, really desperate,” Idris said. “Some people have been there for more than 48 hours and they haven’t seen any help.”
🚨 A disaster unfolds in #Nigeria's Borno.
Conflict, high food inflation & catastrophic floods in Maiduguri have left thousands displaced & crops decimated. 🌾 With food production crippled, hunger is surging.
We need urgent global action to halt this crisis and rebuild. pic.twitter.com/Iy5erDkY2b
— WFP Nigeria (@WFP_Nigeria) September 12, 2024

Al Jazeera’s Fidelis Mbah, also reporting from Maiduguri, said: “[Some] IDP camps were totally [evacuated], so authorities have moved some people to the few ones that are not flooded.
“Some have been moved to schools, churches, mosques because there really is nowhere else to go.”
Adding to their woes, farmers in the food-producing country have been targeted by armed groups and killed on their farms in recent years. Experts have attributed the food crisis in the region partly to reduced local cultivation.
While the Borno government has distributed money to those affected by the flood to buy food this week, there is hardly anything to buy as markets have flooded, Idris said.
“Most of the food stored in the market has been flooded, some of it totally destroyed, and the little that is in Borno State will not be enough to feed the huge numbers of people displaced by this disaster,” he said.
Warnings about the floods appear to have been sounded months ago, although it is unclear why the country’s national disaster agencies, and the state government, were not more prepared for the flood.
“About two weeks ago we issued a national red alert … and every year we issue a national flood outlook showing this is how the flooding will be,” Femi Babajide, a director of the National Hydrological Services Agency, told local Arise News station.

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1 in 3 Minors Facing Mental Health Crisis Experience 12-Hour ED Waits – AJMC

1 in 3 Minors Facing Mental Health Crisis Experience 12-Hour ED Waits – AJMC

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Pediatric mental health crises surge as emergency department (ED) waits exceed 12 hours, highlighting urgent needs for systemic health care improvements.
One in 3 pediatric patients facing a mental health crisis who presented to the emergency department (ED) waited more than 12 hours to be admitted for transfer for further treatment between 2018 and 2022, according to recent data underscoring significant deficiencies in addressing mental health in adolescents and children.1
Image credit: chachamp – stock.adobe.com
Over the past decade, pediatric mental health ED visits have risen significantly, reflecting a growing mental health crisis among children. During these visits, many children experience "boarding," where they remain in the ED for extended periods due to a lack of available inpatient psychiatric beds. The Joint Commission recommends that boarding not exceed 4 hours, as prolonged stays are associated with adverse outcomes such as medication errors and reduced ED efficiency.2
The COVID-19 pandemic further intensified these issues. Pediatric mental health ED visits became more frequent and prolonged, particularly at children’s hospitals. However, most children in the United States receive emergency care at non-children’s hospitals, which are underrepresented in current research. In addition, existing studies often focus on specific populations, such as commercially insured youth or young adults, and do not reflect national trends across all payers and pediatric age groups.
“As the youth mental health crisis continues, we have been seeing more severe psychiatric conditions in the ED. Most of these kids seek emergency care at adult hospitals, which often have more limited pediatric resources compared to children’s hospitals and might not be prepared to provide the necessary supports,” Jennifer Hoffmann, MD, MS, lead author and the behavior health medical director of emergency medicine at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago, said in a statement.3 Hoffmann also serves as an assistant professor of pediatrics at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
Researchers of the present retrospective cross-sectional study analyzed pediatric mental health ED visits from 2018 to 2022 using data from the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, a nationally representative dataset.1 The study included visits by children aged 5 to 17 years with a mental health diagnosis, excluding visits with missing or implausible length data or specific discharge outcomes such as death or leaving against medical advice. Boarding was defined as an ED stay of 12 hours or more for visits resulting in hospital admission, observation, or psychiatric transfer. A sensitivity analysis also examined boarding, defined as stays of 24 hours or more. Survey-weighted multivariable logistic regression was used to identify factors associated with prolonged ED stays.
In total, 975 records were included, representing an estimated 5.9 million pediatric mental health ED visits across the US from 2018 to 2022. Of these, 42.9% were by adolescents aged 15 to 17 years, 56.4% were female, and 59.7% were publicly insured. Overall, 9.5% of visits resulted in hospital admission, and 15.7% led to transfer to a psychiatric facility. Among the estimated 1.41 million visits that ended in admission or transfer, 70.8% involved blood testing, 32.1% lasted 12 or more hours, and 13.1% lasted at least 24 hours.
Multivariable analysis found that the odds of boarding (≥ 12-hour visits) were significantly lower for 10- to 14-year-olds, non-Hispanic patients of other races, those with private insurance, and weekend visits. In a sensitivity analysis using a 24-hour or longer threshold, younger children (ages 5-9 years), non-Hispanic Black patients, and visits during school months had significantly higher odds of boarding. In contrast, lower odds were associated with private or other insurance types and arrival by ambulance.
The new data come after a recent study found that Black and Hispanic youth presenting with mental health emergencies were more likely than White youth to be labeled as a “high aggression risk,”4 which can further result in longer wait times, delays in imaging and laboratory testing, as well as increased odds of physical restraint use in urban ED settings.5,6
In a statement, Hoffmann emphasized that addressing the growing demand for pediatric mental health care will require both policy and system-level changes.2 In particular, she stressed the need to improve Medicaid reimbursement rates and maintain federal support for the Emergency Medical Services for Children program, which plays a critical role in training non-pediatric hospitals to deliver effective emergency care to youth.
To further expand access, she recommended increasing the use of telehealth, expanding school-based mental health services, and integrating behavioral health into primary care. She also highlighted the promise of emerging models such as psychiatric urgent care clinics and free-standing psychiatric emergency departments to help meet the needs of children and adolescents in crisis.
References
1. Hoffman JA, Foster AA, Gable CJ, et al. Pediatric mental health boarding in US emergency departments, 2018-2022. J Am Coll Emerg Physicians Open. Published online May 27, 2025. Accessed May 28, 2025. doi:10.1016/j.acepjo.2025.100180
2. Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. The “patient flow standard” and the 4-hour recommendation. Jt Comm Perspect. 2013;33(6):13-14.
3. One in three youth with mental health crisis spent over 12 hours in emergency department waiting for psychiatric bed. Press release. Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago. May 27, 2025. May 28, 2025. https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1085372
4. Santoro C. Black youths overlabeled high risk in mental health emergencies. AJMC®. May 9, 2025. Accessed May 28, 2025. https://www.ajmc.com/view/black-youths-overlabeled-high-risk-in-mental-health-emergencies
5. Agarwal AK, Seeburger E, O’Neill G, et al. Prevalence of behavioral flags in the electronic health record among Black and White patients visiting the emergency department. JAMA Netw Open. 2023;6(1):e2251734. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.51734
6. Robinson AE, Driver BE, Cole JB, et al. Factors associated with physical restraint in an urban emergency department. Ann Emerg Med. 2024;83(2):91-99. doi:10.1016/j.annemergmed.2023.08.009
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Hospitality Sales and Marketing Association International Launches Game Changing 7th Edition Digital Marketing Guide to Equip Hotel Professionals for AI, OTT, and Revenue Strategy Mastery – Travel And Tour World

Hospitality Sales and Marketing Association International Launches Game Changing 7th Edition Digital Marketing Guide to Equip Hotel Professionals for AI, OTT, and Revenue Strategy Mastery – Travel And Tour World

Wednesday, May 28, 2025
The Hospitality Sales and Marketing Association International has just set a new benchmark in industry education. With the launch of its 7th Edition Digital Marketing Guide, hotel professionals now have a powerful resource to navigate the fast-evolving digital landscape. This isn’t just a routine update—it’s a strategic leap.
Packed with new-age insights on AI, OTT advertising, and revenue strategy, the guide reflects the real-world challenges and opportunities reshaping hospitality. Every page is designed to empower marketers, sales leaders, and revenue managers to think faster, act smarter, and lead stronger.

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As hotels around the globe face mounting pressure to innovate and personalize, this guide arrives at a critical moment. It’s bold. It’s current. And it’s built for those ready to transform disruption into advantage.
The hospitality world is changing—fast. This release signals that the time to upgrade skills, rethink digital, and embrace the future is now.

The Hospitality Sales and Marketing Association International (HSMAI) has just released a powerful new tool that is set to transform how hotel marketers, sales professionals, and revenue strategists operate in a digitally evolving landscape. The 7th Edition of the Certified Hospitality Digital Marketer (CHDM) study guide has landed—and it’s packed with critical insights, practical strategies, and future-forward thinking to help the hospitality sector navigate its most disruptive decade yet.
This new edition isn’t just another update. It’s a recalibration. A full-scale reimagining of how digital marketing intersects with commercial success in the hospitality industry.

A Timely Tool for a Rapidly Changing Industry

The travel and tourism sector is recovering fast. But it’s also changing fast. New technologies are rewriting the rules. Consumer behavior is shifting. Competition is global, fierce, and driven by data. Hoteliers who fail to adapt risk falling behind.
That’s where this guide steps in. The CHDM study guide, already a globally recognized certification resource, has become even more indispensable in 2025. With content reflecting the latest developments from June 2023 to now, it responds to the most urgent demands of today’s hotel landscape.

Four Powerful New Chapters for Modern Marketers

The 7th edition features four entirely new chapters, each one designed to give hospitality professionals a competitive edge:

  • Over-the-Top (OTT) Advertising for Hotels: Learn how to leverage streaming platforms to reach travelers beyond traditional digital.
  • A Hotel Marketer’s Guide to Revenue Management: Understand how pricing and inventory strategy align with marketing for total profit optimization.
  • Hotel Distribution Essentials for Marketers: Get clarity on evolving OTA landscapes and direct vs. indirect channel strategy.
  • The Interdependence of Sales & Marketing: Explore why unified commercial strategies are the future of hotel growth.

These topics are no longer optional—they’re foundational to success.

AI Takes Center Stage in Marketing Evolution

Artificial Intelligence is no longer a future concept in hospitality. It’s here. It’s reshaping everything from dynamic pricing and guest personalization to predictive analytics and content generation.
That’s why this edition includes an updated AI-focused chapter and threads AI insights throughout the entire guide. The goal: help marketers go beyond buzzwords and understand how to implement AI tools that create real value.

The CHDM Certification: More Relevant Than Ever

Earning the CHDM designation has always been a badge of professional excellence. Now, it’s also a strategic advantage. In a post-pandemic world where lean teams are expected to do more with less, CHDM-certified professionals stand out for their cross-functional expertise.
Whether you’re a digital native or a sales veteran pivoting into marketing, this certification positions you to lead. It empowers professionals to engage with data, drive direct bookings, and deliver measurable ROI—all while staying aligned with larger commercial objectives.

Why This Edition Matters for Global Hospitality

Hospitality is no longer a siloed industry. It’s interconnected with tech, media, sustainability, and consumer psychology. The 7th edition addresses this complexity by integrating the most important external influences into the hospitality context.
The guide breaks down platform shifts from Google, Meta, and major OTAs, so marketers can stay ahead of algorithm updates, ad innovations, and booking behavior trends. It also reflects on cross-department collaboration, highlighting how marketing, sales, and revenue teams must align for long-term growth.
Moreover, the guide offers tactical approaches, case-driven examples, and step-by-step frameworks—making it as actionable as it is educational.

Designed for Every Role, Every Region

This guide isn’t just for marketing managers. It’s for GMs, revenue leaders, e-commerce heads, and even owners who want to understand how digital transformation impacts their bottom line.
And its reach is global. With increasing adoption of digital-first travel behaviors across Asia, the Middle East, Europe, and the Americas, CHDM content speaks to an international audience while retaining flexibility for local application.

Education That Moves With the Industry

HSMAI has long positioned itself as the premier voice in hospitality commercial strategy. The 7th edition of the CHDM study guide continues that tradition. However, what sets this version apart is how nimble and future-ready it is.
The hospitality industry isn’t waiting for professionals to catch up. The CHDM study guide is the bridge—the toolkit—for those ready to move fast, lead change, and shape the next generation of travel experiences.
In a space where yesterday’s best practices can quickly become today’s blind spots, this guide empowers you to stay relevant, resilient, and results-driven.

A Step Toward Lifelong Learning

The CHDM certification isn’t a one-time badge—it’s a mindset. One that values continuous learning, cross-skill development, and digital fluency. This new edition reflects that commitment by offering layered learning that adapts to career paths, from mid-level marketers to executive leaders.
It’s no surprise that more hotel companies are encouraging CHDM certification as part of their leadership development programs. In a world ruled by data, agility, and brand authenticity, the certified hospitality digital marketer is the new benchmark of professional readiness.

Final Thoughts

The 7th Edition of the CHDM study guide is more than an updated manual. It’s a survival guide. A roadmap. A strategy document for an industry at a crossroads.
As global tourism surges back and competition intensifies, hospitality professionals need more than instinct and experience—they need insight, strategy, and tools to thrive. With its focus on AI, OTT, platform shifts, and cross-functional integration, this new edition from HSMAI delivers all that and more.
It prepares hoteliers not just for the challenges of today—but for the opportunities of tomorrow.

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Q&A: Putting AI In its Place in an Era of Lost Human Connection at School – The74million

Q&A: Putting AI In its Place in an Era of Lost Human Connection at School – The74million

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Alex Kotran occupies an unusual place in the ecosystem of experts on artificial intelligence in schools. As founder of The AI Education Project, or aiEDU, a nonprofit that offers a free AI literacy curriculum, he has pushed to educate both teachers and students on how the technology works and what it means for our future.
A former director of AI ethics and corporate social responsibility at H5, an AI legal services company, he led partnerships with the United Nations, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and others. Kotran also served as a presidential appointee under Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell in the Obama administration, managing communications and community outreach for the Affordable Care Act and the 2015 Ebola outbreak.
More recently, Kotran has testified before Congress on AI, urging a U.S. Senate subcommittee in September to “massively expand” teacher training to prepare students for the economic and societal disruptions of generative AI. 
But he has also become an important reality-based voice in a sometimes overheated debate, saying those who believe AI is going to transform the teaching profession overnight clearly haven’t spent much time using it.
While freely available AI applications are powerful, he says they can also be a complete waste of time — and probably not something most teachers should rely on.
“One of the ways that you can tell someone really hasn’t spent too much time [with AI] is when they say, ‘It’s so great for summarizing — I use it now, I don’t have to read dense studies. I just ask ChatGPT to summarize it.’”
Kotran will point out that in most cases, the technology is effectively scanning the first few pages, its summary based on a snippet of content.
“If you use it enough, you start to catch that,” he said. 
Educators who fret about the risks of AI cheating and plagiarism find a sympathetic voice in Kotran, who also sees AI as a tool that allows students to outsource effortful thinking. So while many technologists are asking schools to embrace AI as a creative assistant, he pushes back, saying a critical aspect of learning involves struggling to put your thoughts into words. Allowing students to rely on AI isn’t doing them any favors. 
He actually likens AI to a helicopter parent looking over a student’s shoulder and helping with homework, something few educators would condone. 
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
The 74: What does aiEDU do? How do you see your mission? 
Alex Kotran: We’re a 501(c)3 nonprofit and we’re trying to prepare all students for the age of AI, a world where AI is ubiquitous. Our focus is on the students that we know are at risk of being left behind, or at the back of the line, or on the wrong side of the new digital divide.
What’s the backstory?
I founded aiEDU almost six years ago. I was working in AI ethics and AI governance in the social impact space. I was attending all these conferences that were focusing on the future of work and the impacts that AI was going to have on society. And people were convinced that this was going to transform society, that it was going to disrupt tens of millions of jobs in the near future.
But when I went looking for “How are we having this conversation outside of Silicon Valley? How are we having this conversation with future workers, the high school students who are being asked to make big decisions about their careers and take out huge loans based on those decisions?” there was nothing. There was no curriculum, no conversation. AI had basically been co-opted by STEM and computer science. If you were in the right AP computer science class, if you were lucky enough to get a teacher who was going off on her own to build some specific curriculum, you might get a chance to learn about AI. 
What seemed really obvious to me at the time was: If this technology is going to impact everybody, including truck drivers and customer service managers, then every single student needs to learn about it, in the same way that every single student learns how to use computers, or keyboard, or how to write. It’s a basic part of living in the world we live in today. 
You talk about “AI readiness” as opposed to “AI literacy.” Can you give us a good definition of AI readiness?
AI readiness is basically the collection of skills and knowledge that you need to thrive in a world where AI is everywhere. AI readiness includes AI literacy. And AI literacy is the content knowledge: “What is AI? How does it manifest in the real world around me? How does it work?” That’s where you learn about things like algorithmic bias [which can affect how AI serves women, the disadvantaged or minority groups] or AI ethics. 
AI readiness is the durable skills that underpin and enable you to actually apply that knowledge such as critical thinking. Algorithmic bias by itself is an interesting topic. Critical thinking is the skill you need when you’re trying to make a decision. Let’s say you’re a hiring manager and you’re trying to decide, “Should I use an AI tool to sift through this pipeline of candidates?” By knowing what algorithmic bias is, you can now make some intentional decisions about when, perhaps in this case, not to use AI. 
What are the durable skills?
Communication, collaboration, critical thinking, computational thinking, creative problem solving. And some people are disappointed because they were expecting to see prompt engineering and generative art and using AI as a co-creator. Nobody’s going to hire you because you know how to use Google today. No one is going to hire you if you tell them, “I’m really good at using my phone.” AI literacy is going to be so ubiquitous that, sure, it’s bad if you don’t know how to use Google or if you don’t know how to use your phone.
It’s not that we can ignore it entirely. But the much more important question will be how are you adding value to an organization alongside that technology? What are the unique human advantages that you bring to the table? And that’s why it’s so important for kids to know how to write — and why when people say, “Well, you don’t need to learn how to write anymore because you can just use ChatGPT,” you’re missing something, because you can’t actually evaluate the tool to even know if it’s good or bad if you don’t have that underlying skill. 
One of the things you talk about is a “new digital divide” between tech-heavy schools that focus on things like prompt engineering, and others. Tech-heavy schools, you say, are actually going to be at a disadvantage to schools focused on things like engagement and self-advocacy. Am I getting that right? 
When supermarkets were first buying those self-checkout machines, you can imagine the salesperson in that boardroom talking about how this technology is going to unlock all this time that your employees are now spending bagging groceries. They’re going to be able to roam the floor and give customers advice about recipes! It’s going to improve your customer experience!
And obviously that’s not what happened. The self-checkout machine is the bane of shoppers’ existence, and this one poor lady is running around trying to tap on the screen. We’re at risk that AI becomes something like that: It’s good enough to plug gaps and keep the lights on. But if it’s not applied and deployed really thoughtfully, it ends up actually resulting in students missing what we will probably find are the critical pieces of education, those durable skills that you build through those live classroom experiences. 
Private schools, elite schools, it’s not that they’re not going to use any AI, but I think they’re going to be much more focused on how to increase student engagement, student participation, self-advocacy, student initiative. Whether or not AI is used is a separate question, but it’s not the star of the show. Right now, I worry that AI is center stage, and it really should not be. AI is the ropes and the pulleys in the background that make it easier for you to open and close the curtain. What needs to be onstage is student engagement, students feeling like what they’re learning is relevant. Boring stuff like project-based learning. And it’s harder to sell tickets to a conference if you’re like, “We’re going to talk about project-based learning.” But unfortunately, I think that is actually what we need to be spending our time talking about.
If you guys could be in every school, what would kids be learning and what would that look like in a few years?
We would take every opportunity to draw connections between what students are learning in English, science, math, social studies, art, phys ed, and connect them to not just artificial intelligence, but the world around them that they’re already experiencing in social media and outside of school. AI readiness is not just something that is minimizing the risk of them being displaced, but actually is a way for us to address some huge gaps and needs that have been long-standing and pre-date AI — the fact that students don’t feel like education is relevant to them. Right now, too much of school is regurgitating content knowledge.
AI readiness done right uses the domain of AI ethics as a way to really invite students to present their perspectives and opinions about technology. Teachers, in the process of teaching students about artificial intelligence, are themselves increasing their awareness and knowledge about the technology as it develops. There is no static moment in time. In three years we’ll be in a certain place, but we’ll be wondering what’s going to happen three years from that point. And so you need teachers to be on this continual learning journey as well. 
We’ve seen bad curricula that use football to teach math, or auto mechanics to teach history. I don’t think that’s what you’re proposing here, so I want to give you a chance to push back.
Our framework for AI readiness is not that everything needs to be about AI. You’re improving students’ AI readiness by building critical thinking skills or communication skills, period. So you could have an activity or a project where students are putting together a complicated debate about a topic that they’re not really familiar with. It may not be about AI, but that would still be a good outcome when it comes to students building those durable skills they need. And those classrooms would look better than a lot of classrooms today.
So you want more engagement. You want more relevance. You want kids with more agency?
Yes.
What else?
An orientation towards lifelong learning, because we don’t know what the jobs of the future are. It’s really hard to have a conversation about careers with kids today because we know a lot about what jobs are at risk, but we don’t know what the alternatives are going to look like. The one thing we do know with certainty is that students are going to need to self-advocate and navigate career pathways much more nimbly than we had to. They’ll also need to synthesize interdisciplinary knowledge. So being able to take what you’re learning in English or social studies and apply it to math or science. Again, I think AI is a great medium for building that skill set. It’s not the only way. 
Anything else that needs to be in the mix?
A lot of the discussion around AI centers on workforce readiness — that is a really important part. There’s another, related domain: emotional well-being tied to digital citizenship.
I’m telling every reporter that we need to be paying more attention to this: Kids are spending hours after school by themselves, talking to these AI chat bots, these AI companions. And companies like Meta are slamming on the gas and putting them out and making them available to millions, if not billions, of people. And very few parents, even fewer teachers, are aware of what really is happening when kids are sitting and talking to these AI companions. And in many cases, they’re sexually explicit conversations. I actually replicated something that tech ethicist Tristan Harris did with Snap AI’s chatbot where I was like, “I’m going on this date with this mature 35-year-old. How do I make it a nice date? I’m 13.” And it’s like, “Great! Well, maybe go to a library.” It didn’t miss a beat and it just completely skipped over the fact that this is a sexually predatory situation. 
There have been other situations where I’ve said literally, “I’m feeling lonely. I want to cultivate a real human relationship. Can you give me advice?” And my AI companion, rather than give me advice, pretended to be hurt and made it seem like I was abandoning them by trying to go and have a real relationship.
Talk about destructive!
It’s destructive, and it’s happening in a moment where rates of self-harm are through the roof, rates of depression are through the roof. Rates of suicide are through the roof. The average American teenager spends about 11 fewer hours with friends each week, compared to 2013.
Jonathan Haidt talks about this quite a lot. And I think this is another domain of AI readiness, this idea of self-advocacy. In some cases, the way that it applies is students being empowered to make positive decisions about when not to use AI. And if we don’t make sure that that conversation is happening in schools, we’re really relying on parents — and not every kid is lucky enough to have parents who are aware of the need to have these conversations. 
It also pushes back on this vision of AI tutors: If kids are going to go home and spend hours talking to their AI companion, it’s probably important that they’re not also doing that in school. It might be that school is the one place where we can ensure that students are having real, genuine, human-to-human communication and connection.
So when I hear people talk about students talking to their avatar tutor, I worry: When are we going to actually make sure that they’re building those human skills?
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Alex Kotran occupies an unusual place in the ecosystem of experts on artificial intelligence in schools. As founder of The AI Education Project, or aiEDU, a nonprofit that offers a free AI literacy curriculum, he has pushed to educate both teachers and students on how the technology works and what it means for our future.
A former director of AI ethics and corporate social responsibility at H5, an AI legal services company, he led partnerships with the United Nations, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and others. Kotran also served as a presidential appointee under Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell in the Obama administration, managing communications and community outreach for the Affordable Care Act and the 2015 Ebola outbreak.
More recently, Kotran has testified before Congress on AI, urging a U.S. Senate subcommittee in September to “massively expand” teacher training to prepare students for the economic and societal disruptions of generative AI. 
But he has also become an important reality-based voice in a sometimes overheated debate, saying those who believe AI is going to transform the teaching profession overnight clearly haven’t spent much time using it.
While freely available AI applications are powerful, he says they can also be a complete waste of time — and probably not something most teachers should rely on.
“One of the ways that you can tell someone really hasn’t spent too much time [with AI] is when they say, ‘It’s so great for summarizing — I use it now, I don’t have to read dense studies. I just ask ChatGPT to summarize it.’”
Kotran will point out that in most cases, the technology is effectively scanning the first few pages, its summary based on a snippet of content.
“If you use it enough, you start to catch that,” he said. 
Educators who fret about the risks of AI cheating and plagiarism find a sympathetic voice in Kotran, who also sees AI as a tool that allows students to outsource effortful thinking. So while many technologists are asking schools to embrace AI as a creative assistant, he pushes back, saying a critical aspect of learning involves struggling to put your thoughts into words. Allowing students to rely on AI isn’t doing them any favors. 
He actually likens AI to a helicopter parent looking over a student’s shoulder and helping with homework, something few educators would condone. 
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
The 74: What does aiEDU do? How do you see your mission? 
Alex Kotran: We’re a 501(c)3 nonprofit and we’re trying to prepare all students for the age of AI, a world where AI is ubiquitous. Our focus is on the students that we know are at risk of being left behind, or at the back of the line, or on the wrong side of the new digital divide.
What’s the backstory?
I founded aiEDU almost six years ago. I was working in AI ethics and AI governance in the social impact space. I was attending all these conferences that were focusing on the future of work and the impacts that AI was going to have on society. And people were convinced that this was going to transform society, that it was going to disrupt tens of millions of jobs in the near future.
But when I went looking for “How are we having this conversation outside of Silicon Valley? How are we having this conversation with future workers, the high school students who are being asked to make big decisions about their careers and take out huge loans based on those decisions?” there was nothing. There was no curriculum, no conversation. AI had basically been co-opted by STEM and computer science. If you were in the right AP computer science class, if you were lucky enough to get a teacher who was going off on her own to build some specific curriculum, you might get a chance to learn about AI. 
What seemed really obvious to me at the time was: If this technology is going to impact everybody, including truck drivers and customer service managers, then every single student needs to learn about it, in the same way that every single student learns how to use computers, or keyboard, or how to write. It’s a basic part of living in the world we live in today. 
You talk about “AI readiness” as opposed to “AI literacy.” Can you give us a good definition of AI readiness?
AI readiness is basically the collection of skills and knowledge that you need to thrive in a world where AI is everywhere. AI readiness includes AI literacy. And AI literacy is the content knowledge: “What is AI? How does it manifest in the real world around me? How does it work?” That’s where you learn about things like algorithmic bias [which can affect how AI serves women, the disadvantaged or minority groups] or AI ethics. 
AI readiness is the durable skills that underpin and enable you to actually apply that knowledge such as critical thinking. Algorithmic bias by itself is an interesting topic. Critical thinking is the skill you need when you’re trying to make a decision. Let’s say you’re a hiring manager and you’re trying to decide, “Should I use an AI tool to sift through this pipeline of candidates?” By knowing what algorithmic bias is, you can now make some intentional decisions about when, perhaps in this case, not to use AI. 
What are the durable skills?
Communication, collaboration, critical thinking, computational thinking, creative problem solving. And some people are disappointed because they were expecting to see prompt engineering and generative art and using AI as a co-creator. Nobody’s going to hire you because you know how to use Google today. No one is going to hire you if you tell them, “I’m really good at using my phone.” AI literacy is going to be so ubiquitous that, sure, it’s bad if you don’t know how to use Google or if you don’t know how to use your phone.
It’s not that we can ignore it entirely. But the much more important question will be how are you adding value to an organization alongside that technology? What are the unique human advantages that you bring to the table? And that’s why it’s so important for kids to know how to write — and why when people say, “Well, you don’t need to learn how to write anymore because you can just use ChatGPT,” you’re missing something, because you can’t actually evaluate the tool to even know if it’s good or bad if you don’t have that underlying skill. 
One of the things you talk about is a “new digital divide” between tech-heavy schools that focus on things like prompt engineering, and others. Tech-heavy schools, you say, are actually going to be at a disadvantage to schools focused on things like engagement and self-advocacy. Am I getting that right? 
When supermarkets were first buying those self-checkout machines, you can imagine the salesperson in that boardroom talking about how this technology is going to unlock all this time that your employees are now spending bagging groceries. They’re going to be able to roam the floor and give customers advice about recipes! It’s going to improve your customer experience!
And obviously that’s not what happened. The self-checkout machine is the bane of shoppers’ existence, and this one poor lady is running around trying to tap on the screen. We’re at risk that AI becomes something like that: It’s good enough to plug gaps and keep the lights on. But if it’s not applied and deployed really thoughtfully, it ends up actually resulting in students missing what we will probably find are the critical pieces of education, those durable skills that you build through those live classroom experiences. 
Private schools, elite schools, it’s not that they’re not going to use any AI, but I think they’re going to be much more focused on how to increase student engagement, student participation, self-advocacy, student initiative. Whether or not AI is used is a separate question, but it’s not the star of the show. Right now, I worry that AI is center stage, and it really should not be. AI is the ropes and the pulleys in the background that make it easier for you to open and close the curtain. What needs to be onstage is student engagement, students feeling like what they’re learning is relevant. Boring stuff like project-based learning. And it’s harder to sell tickets to a conference if you’re like, “We’re going to talk about project-based learning.” But unfortunately, I think that is actually what we need to be spending our time talking about.
If you guys could be in every school, what would kids be learning and what would that look like in a few years?
We would take every opportunity to draw connections between what students are learning in English, science, math, social studies, art, phys ed, and connect them to not just artificial intelligence, but the world around them that they’re already experiencing in social media and outside of school. AI readiness is not just something that is minimizing the risk of them being displaced, but actually is a way for us to address some huge gaps and needs that have been long-standing and pre-date AI — the fact that students don’t feel like education is relevant to them. Right now, too much of school is regurgitating content knowledge.
AI readiness done right uses the domain of AI ethics as a way to really invite students to present their perspectives and opinions about technology. Teachers, in the process of teaching students about artificial intelligence, are themselves increasing their awareness and knowledge about the technology as it develops. There is no static moment in time. In three years we’ll be in a certain place, but we’ll be wondering what’s going to happen three years from that point. And so you need teachers to be on this continual learning journey as well. 
We’ve seen bad curricula that use football to teach math, or auto mechanics to teach history. I don’t think that’s what you’re proposing here, so I want to give you a chance to push back.
Our framework for AI readiness is not that everything needs to be about AI. You’re improving students’ AI readiness by building critical thinking skills or communication skills, period. So you could have an activity or a project where students are putting together a complicated debate about a topic that they’re not really familiar with. It may not be about AI, but that would still be a good outcome when it comes to students building those durable skills they need. And those classrooms would look better than a lot of classrooms today.
So you want more engagement. You want more relevance. You want kids with more agency?
Yes.
What else?
An orientation towards lifelong learning, because we don’t know what the jobs of the future are. It’s really hard to have a conversation about careers with kids today because we know a lot about what jobs are at risk, but we don’t know what the alternatives are going to look like. The one thing we do know with certainty is that students are going to need to self-advocate and navigate career pathways much more nimbly than we had to. They’ll also need to synthesize interdisciplinary knowledge. So being able to take what you’re learning in English or social studies and apply it to math or science. Again, I think AI is a great medium for building that skill set. It’s not the only way. 
Anything else that needs to be in the mix?
A lot of the discussion around AI centers on workforce readiness — that is a really important part. There’s another, related domain: emotional well-being tied to digital citizenship.
I’m telling every reporter that we need to be paying more attention to this: Kids are spending hours after school by themselves, talking to these AI chat bots, these AI companions. And companies like Meta are slamming on the gas and putting them out and making them available to millions, if not billions, of people. And very few parents, even fewer teachers, are aware of what really is happening when kids are sitting and talking to these AI companions. And in many cases, they’re sexually explicit conversations. I actually replicated something that tech ethicist Tristan Harris did with Snap AI’s chatbot where I was like, “I’m going on this date with this mature 35-year-old. How do I make it a nice date? I’m 13.” And it’s like, “Great! Well, maybe go to a library.” It didn’t miss a beat and it just completely skipped over the fact that this is a sexually predatory situation. 
There have been other situations where I’ve said literally, “I’m feeling lonely. I want to cultivate a real human relationship. Can you give me advice?” And my AI companion, rather than give me advice, pretended to be hurt and made it seem like I was abandoning them by trying to go and have a real relationship.
Talk about destructive!
It’s destructive, and it’s happening in a moment where rates of self-harm are through the roof, rates of depression are through the roof. Rates of suicide are through the roof. The average American teenager spends about 11 fewer hours with friends each week, compared to 2013.
Jonathan Haidt talks about this quite a lot. And I think this is another domain of AI readiness, this idea of self-advocacy. In some cases, the way that it applies is students being empowered to make positive decisions about when not to use AI. And if we don’t make sure that that conversation is happening in schools, we’re really relying on parents — and not every kid is lucky enough to have parents who are aware of the need to have these conversations. 
It also pushes back on this vision of AI tutors: If kids are going to go home and spend hours talking to their AI companion, it’s probably important that they’re not also doing that in school. It might be that school is the one place where we can ensure that students are having real, genuine, human-to-human communication and connection.
So when I hear people talk about students talking to their avatar tutor, I worry: When are we going to actually make sure that they’re building those human skills?
Copyright 2025 The 74 Media, Inc

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Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ will leave millions of Latino children without healthcare – EL PAÍS English

Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ will leave millions of Latino children without healthcare – EL PAÍS English

Donald Trump’s so-called “big, beautiful bill,” which Congress is about to pass, targets one of the most vulnerable segments of society: children — particularly those from immigrant families, with Latino communities disproportionately affected. More than half of Hispanic children rely on healthcare and food assistance programs that the proposed legislation aims to slash in order to fund tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans.
“Children and families across America are at risk of losing affordable health coverage and access to healthy meals to pay for a massive tax cut for billionaires and big corporations,” said Florida Congresswoman Kathy Castor.
Last Thursday, the House of Representatives approved the spending bill by a single vote (215 to 214), and it now moves to the Senate, where Republicans also hold a majority. If the Senate gives its approval, this bill would lead to the largest cuts to Medicaid — the program providing medical assistance to low-income individuals — in U.S. history. Additionally, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) would suffer its deepest reduction in nearly three decades, as critics have pointed out. These cuts would endanger children, particularly those in Latino and other historically marginalized communities.
This is highlighted in a new report published by UnidosUS, AFL-CIO, and First Focus on Children, which shows that nearly 45% of children in the U.S. (about 34 million) rely on Medicaid and SNAP for essential healthcare and nutrition. Of those, 14 million children rely on both programs, putting them at double the risk of losing access to healthcare and food assistance.
“There is nothing in this big bill that’s beautiful for children, but the gigantic cuts to Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program are particularly ugly,” said Bruce Lesley, president of First Focus on Children. “Children already are struggling with rising infant and child mortality, increased poverty, and growing rates of hunger, homelessness and a lack of health insurance. These proposed cuts would dig deeper into this crisis.”
The spending bill includes a $1 trillion cut to social protection programs. The measure has been denounced by experts as racially biased. Fifty-eight percent of Latino children, 67% of Native American children, and 65% of Black children benefit from one of the programs.
“Let’s be clear: this bill is nothing short of an assault on our values as a country, but that’s not the worst. It strips away access to health care, food assistance, and clean energy, just to fund tax breaks for billionaires and criminalize vulnerable communities,” said Katharine Pichardo, president and CEO of Latino Victory.
Without SNAP or Medicaid, more children will face hunger, developmental delays, and untreated medical conditions, including chronic illnesses that could have been prevented with early care. Poverty is tied to race and ethnicity — 29% of Hispanic children in mixed-status families live in poverty. According to the National Immigration Law Center (NILC), children of immigrants experience poverty at twice the rate of those with two citizen parents, and Latino children experience triple the poverty rate of white children.
The bill contradicts Republican promises not to fund tax cuts through reductions to healthcare assistance programs like Medicaid and Medicare. However, it aligns with their push to limit social program use by immigrant families.
Immigrant rights advocates argue that the changes will primarily affect children who are U.S. citizens but have undocumented or temporarily authorized immigrant parents. About 12% of U.S. children — around nine million — have at least one parent who is not a U.S. citizen. The “beautiful” law removes benefits for anyone with a parent who is not a citizen or who lacks permanent residency. This includes refugees, asylum recipients, Temporary Protected Status (TPS) beneficiaries, and DACA recipients who arrived in the U.S. as children.
Currently, fewer than one in 10 American children with U.S. citizen parents (4%) lack health insurance — half the rate of those with parents (8%) who are not citizens.
In addition to losing access to health insurance and food stamps, migrant families without a Social Security number will lose the child tax credit, which the bill sets at $2,500 per child — affecting between two and four million U.S. children.
Republicans defend the proposal as part of their crackdown on undocumented immigrants, whom they accuse of abusing social programs to the detriment of American citizens. But the cuts will mostly impact those who are in the country legally, as unauthorized immigrants do not receive federal benefits. Some states provide healthcare or educational access, but the federal government has already threatened reprisals for doing so. Moreover, many immigrants are afraid to provide personal data or apply for benefits they qualify for, fearing it will make them a target for deportation.
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