【Calgary, Can】This Calgary School Embraces Artificial Intelligence for Report Cards and Lesson Planning

Editor’s Note

This article explores how one Calgary school is piloting AI tools to assist teachers with lesson planning and report card comments, aiming to reduce administrative burdens. The initiative highlights the growing role of generative AI in education as a support for educators, not a replacement.

A photo collage. To the left, an iMac screen showing AI tools. To the right, the front of a school.
AI Tools for Teachers

One Calgary school is using artificial intelligence to help teachers with some of their most time-consuming tasks: creating lesson plans and writing report card comments. Connect Charter School, a grade 4 to 9 school in southwest Calgary, worked with a University of Calgary researcher to develop two generative AI tools aimed at reducing the cognitive load for teachers while completing those two tasks.

How the Tools Work

The tools — called Ally and Harmony — were introduced last year. For lesson planning, teachers input desired outcomes, unit length, and other elements. The AI generates a suggested lesson plan within minutes, which the teacher then tweaks. For report cards, teachers enter student grades and assessments. The AI tool generates comments for each student, which the teacher then reviews, edits, and personalizes.

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“A lot of the time, you’re just looking for that spark of an idea where it’s like, where should I take this lesson? Where should I take this unit? And that tool has really been helpful with that,” said Brett Toner, a teacher and educational technologist at the school. “It really can give you that spark in one minute rather than brainstorming on it for days or weeks and finally having that aha moment.”
Student Use of AI

While the school focuses on AI for teachers, high school students are already using AI extensively. Interviews with students at two Calgary high schools revealed that all eight students spoken to use generative AI tools like ChatGPT and DeepSeek. Uses range from finding shows to watch and calculating recipe ratios to completing schoolwork and passing it off as their own.

A teacher stands against a bulletin board that has student art hung up on it.
“More and more technology is becoming a part of our lives, so we should be taught about AI and how to be safe and use it carefully,” said Grade 12 student Ava Grenkow, who expressed concerns about dependency and the spread of misinformation.
Expert Perspective and Ethical Challenges

Soroush Sabbaghan, an associate professor at the University of Calgary who specializes in generative AI in education, helped develop the tools for Connect Charter School. He initially declined a request to help get students using AI directly, believing it is too early for classroom instruction as the best approaches are still being understood. He supported creating tools for teachers as a way to help them understand AI’s potential and drawbacks.

The back of a woman's head as she sits at her desk, using an iMac. On the screen, it says
“As for introducing AI to younger students in the classroom, there are ethical challenges,” said Sabbaghan.
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⏰ Published on: March 10, 2025