AI Recommendations
The AI generates targeted recommendations for a learner — instructional strategies, resources, interventions, enrichment, grouping, technology tools, practice activities, family support, reflection prompts, and professional supports — and every recommendation comes with a rationale so educators can see the reasoning before they review, approve, and adapt it. All data is fictional and illustrative.
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Example recommendations
Every recommendation the AI produces explains why it was suggested. The rationale makes the reasoning transparent and supports educator review — teachers can confirm, adjust, or reject each idea based on what they know about the learner.
📚 Instructional strategy
Use reciprocal teaching (predict, question, clarify, summarize) in a structured small group, three times per week.
Why this recommendation: The learner reasons well aloud and stays more engaged in structured discussion than in independent silent reading, so a routine that channels talk toward comprehension plays to a strength.
🧰 Resource & technology tool
Provide leveled, high-interest passages with a text-to-speech option and embedded comprehension scaffolds.
Why this recommendation: Interest-based texts increase persistence, and audio support reduces decoding load so the learner's energy goes toward meaning rather than word-by-word reading.
👥 Flexible grouping & practice activity
Pair the learner with two peers at a similar instructional level for daily "teach-back" summary practice.
Why this recommendation: Right-sized groups give more turns and faster feedback, and explaining ideas to a peer strengthens retention more than re-reading alone.
🏠 Family support & reflection prompt
Send home a 10-minute shared-reading routine with one nightly "What surprised you?" reflection question.
Why this recommendation: Brief, specific home routines are sustainable for families, and a single reflection prompt builds metacognition without adding pressure.
👤 Human-in-the-loop The AI is a planning assistant. Every recommendation — and its rationale — is a draft that educators review, approve, and adapt. All data is fictional and illustrative.