ChatGPT & Generative AI

Harnessing AI for Standards Alignment in World Languages

Aligning lessons with standards is time-consuming, and this is an area of planning where AI tools can be helpful.

October 10, 2024

Your content has been saved!

Go to My Saved Content.
Greg Mably / The iSpot

When it comes to teaching, especially in the world language classroom, aligning lessons with standards can sometimes feel like the least-exciting part of the job. Ideally, we start with the standards—those carefully crafted benchmarks that guide our teaching—and then build lessons that meet those expectations. But the reality is that we often have those great lesson ideas in mind first, the ones we know will resonate with our students. The challenge then becomes making sure these creative, engaging lessons align with the required standards. That’s where things can get tricky and where the joy of teaching can start to wane as we navigate the sea of jargon and frameworks to ensure that everything fits just right.

But what if there were a way to keep the fun in your teaching while still ensuring that your lessons hit all the right marks? This is where artificial intelligence (AI) can help.

I first started using AI for standards alignment when my team at Carnegie Learning wanted to map our curriculum to the Common European Framework of References for Languages, or CEFR standards. The CEFR is a guideline used to describe the achievements of learners of world languages. It provides a standardized method for learning, teaching, and assessing language proficiency, divided into six levels from A1 (beginner) to C2 (proficient). These standards are crucial for ensuring that language learners meet consistent benchmarks of proficiency, regardless of where or how they are learning.

My team had initially developed our curriculum to align with the ACTFL standards, which are widely used in the United States for world language education, but we decided to show how our curriculum also meets the CEFR standards. It felt like a daunting task. That’s where AI turned what could have been a tedious process into something far more manageable—and teachers can do the same thing with their lessons.

Creating a Custom GPT

OpenAI’s ChatGPT was my go-to tool for this task. Instead of using the basic chat function, I trained a custom GPT (generative pre-trained transformer) for CEFR standards alignment. I started by uploading a PDF of the CEFR standards, including the rubric specifically designed for teaching world languages. This document covered levels of proficiency and benchmarks. By feeding this data into the model, I was confident that there was a solid foundation to work from when suggesting standards alignments. Once the data was uploaded, I conducted initial testing to ensure the validity of the tool.

Creating a custom GPT for standards alignment allowed me to tailor the AI so that it functioned in a very specific way and enabled me to train it on a precise dataset. Plus, I was able to easily revisit and tweak the custom GPT when it became clear that it was missing key information, saving me a significant amount of time by allowing me to focus on refining and reviewing these suggestions rather than starting from scratch each time. This consistency was invaluable, especially when working across multiple languages and different standards frameworks.

Limitations

Try as I might, the results I got with AI weren’t perfect. There were times when it generated “hallucinations”—that is, it would suggest standards that didn’t make sense or align with the lesson. The key to avoiding these pitfalls was to treat AI as part of a human-centered workflow. AI is great for doing the heavy lifting, but I’ve learned that it’s not meant to produce a final deliverable on its own.

By keeping the AI’s suggestions as one step in a broader process with multiple iterations and plenty of human oversight, I was able to use it effectively without falling into misinformation traps.

Using Basic ChatGPT

For world language teachers looking to streamline their workflow with AI, you don’t need to customize a GPT as I did for aligning an entire curriculum. You can use basic ChatGPT to save time and enhance your lesson planning. For instance, you can copy and paste your lesson into ChatGPT and guide it to suggest standards that align with your content.

Try a prompt like this: “Here’s a Spanish lesson on daily routines for beginners. What ACTFL or state standards align with this lesson?”

To ensure accuracy, ask the tool to provide evidence by producing the standards it uses. For example: ”Can you provide the ACTFL standards for Spanish level 1?”

You can also start with a specific standard and ask ChatGPT to suggest lessons or teaching methods that meet that standard. A useful prompt might be “I need a lesson idea for teaching reflexive verbs that aligns with ACTFL Standard 1.2 (Interpretive Communication).”

Additionally, if you’re focusing on a particular topic, you can ask the AI to propose a lesson centered around that topic and a relevant standard. For example: “Can you suggest a lesson on cultural practices in Mexico that focuses on ACTFL Standard 2.1 (Relating Cultural Practices to Perspectives)?”

This approach helps you quickly align your world language teaching with national or state standards, making lesson planning more efficient.

AI is more than just a time-saving tool—it’s a game-changer for world language teachers who are looking to keep their lessons engaging while staying aligned with ACTFL, state, or national standards. Whether you start with a lesson or with a set of standards, an AI tool like ChatGPT can help bridge the gap between creative teaching and educational benchmarks. By integrating AI into your workflow, you can reduce the time spent on administrative tasks and focus more on what matters: delivering meaningful, culturally rich, and standards-aligned lessons that resonate with your students.

Ask Edutopia AIBETA

What are some other ways AI can help me with planning?
Can AI help me with lesson planning in particular?
Responses are generated by artificial intelligence. AI can make mistakes.

Share This Story

  • email icon

Filed Under

  • ChatGPT & Generative AI
  • World Languages
  • 6-8 Middle School
  • 9-12 High School

Follow Edutopia

  • facebook icon
  • twitter icon
  • instagram icon
  • youtube icon
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
George Lucas Educational Foundation
Edutopia is an initiative of the George Lucas Educational Foundation.
Edutopia®, the EDU Logo™ and Lucas Education Research Logo® are trademarks or registered trademarks of the George Lucas Educational Foundation in the U.S. and other countries.