UNBOUND: Education in the Age of Disruption
Analysis, resources, and field insights through the lens of Sustainable Learning.
Pedagogy and Governance: What Responsible AI Adoption Requires
Responsible AI adoption in education requires two things. They are not in tension. They are not alternatives. They are both necessary, and neither is sufficient without the other.
The first is pedagogy. Does the tool strengthen the student-teacher-content relationship or weaken it? Does it support the cognitive work that produces learning, or does it displace that work? Is it deployed as part of a deliberate instructional design, or is it dropped into practice and left to operate without evidence of what it actually does? The field's most serious institutions — Brookings, UNESCO, UNICEF — have spent significant resources trying to answer these questions, and the answers are worth taking seriously. AI enriches learning only under specific conditions. Those conditions require deliberate design.
The second is governance. Who controls the environment in which pedagogy occurs? What has the institution agreed to in the contract before the tool was ever used in a classroom? Whose data is being collected, under what terms, stored where, and used for what purposes? Does the institution retain the capacity to change direction, or has it ceded that capacity to a vendor without realizing it?
These are equally the right questions. The field has not been asking them at anything close to the same scale.
How Do I Teach This Paper: What Education Research Can Learn from Neuroscience and Why It Matters
No editorially independent publication in education connects the research community to itself and to the practitioners whose work it is supposed to inform — across formats, across disagreements, and including critical coverage of its own structural conditions.
Neuroscience built that infrastructure when it created The Transmitter and its recurring series "How to Teach This Paper" — a model for walking practitioners through not just what a study found, but how it was designed, what the methods assume, and what it would take to apply it responsibly. Education has not.
Data Storytelling in a World of Knowledge Asymmetry
The problem is not the absence of data. It is the inability of systems to turn evidence into instructional improvement. Two reports. Two contexts. One structural failure.
This week in UNBOUND, a study of data storytelling in U.S. data science classrooms and a policy brief on foundational learning data in Kenya reveal the same challenge: education systems often generate evidence but fail to translate it into changes in teaching.
When the Tool Becomes the Threat: What UNICEF's Data Governance Report Reveals About Digital Stewardship
In January 2025, a single cyberattack on one EdTech company compromised student data across 80 school districts in Canada and reached into the United States.
UNICEF Innocenti called it a case illustration — not a turning point.
Their new data governance report, developed across five regions with data protection authorities, civil society, and EdTech companies, confirms what education systems have been signaling for years: tools entering classrooms are optimized for adoption, not learning, and the students bearing the most risk are those who were already most vulnerable.
The latest piece in UNBOUND reads the report through a Digital Stewardship lens. What the policy consensus is finally naming. What it still leaves for practitioners to do.
When “Open” Becomes Extraction
When “open” becomes extraction: the OER–AI conundrum reveals what happens when knowledge is treated as free input rather than shared infrastructure—and why digital stewardship now matters.
Beyond Digital as Usual: Digital Stewardship as Public Infrastructure
Last week I promised an AI field guide. What arrived instead was a manifesto.
This week on UNBOUND, I explore what UNICEF’s strategy gets right—and why digital stewardship must extend beyond tools to include ideas, attribution, and faithful co-creation.
Public Good AI needed to ensure AI strengthens—not weakens—education.
If AI were built as a public good —transparent, governed, and accessible—an entirely new class of educational problems would become solvable. Most importantly, we could finally address a challenge that has undermined learning for decades: how to keep education functioning when systems around it fail.
Welcome to Unbound
UNBOUND explores education in the age of disruption through the lens of Sustainable Learning. You'll find analysis alongside practical resources—some pieces examine system shifts, others stay close to practice, all shaped by real constraints. I hope you'll subscribe, comment, or share what resonates.