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AI Tools

1.0 Choosing Tools for Goals

5/3/2026

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​Choosing Tools for Goals, Building Confidence, and Learning in Community

Nadine Leads a Group Conversation in the Library Media Center

The library media center buzzed with after-school energy. Chairs scraped lightly across the floor. Backpacks dropped beside tables. A printer hummed in the corner like it had opinions. Posters on the walls read:
CREATE. QUESTION. BUILD. BELONG.

Middle school and high school girls filled the room beside their mothers and guardians. Some opened Chromebooks. Others only had phones. One girl had a notebook covered in stickers that said Future CEO and Still Loading...

At the front stood Nadine, smiling warmly, carrying a tote bag stuffed with chargers, sticky notes, and what looked like three tangled earbuds fighting for survival.

Nadine:
Okay… first question before we start. Who in here has ever downloaded an app because somebody online said it would “change your life”… and then never opened it again?

Almost every hand shot up.
The room erupted in laughter.

Nadine:
Exactly. See? We are already united in truth.

Mrs. Rivera (mother):
Mine was a budgeting app. It judged me immediately.

More laughter.

Nadine:
Today is not about chasing every shiny tool on the internet. Today is about learning how to choose tools that actually help your life.

She wrote three words on the board:
GOAL → TOOL → ACTION

Nadine:
Too many people start backwards. They ask, “What’s the hottest AI tool?”

No. Start with:
What do I need help with?

A high school student, Imani, raised her hand.

Imani:

So if I’m stressed and behind on schoolwork?

Nadine:
Good. Real problem. Not fake influencer problem. Real life problem.

She pointed dramatically like a game show host.

Nadine:

For school stress:
  • ChatGPT – help explain hard concepts, organize study plans, brainstorm essay ideas
  • Gemini – helpful if you already use Google Docs, Gmail, Drive
  • NotebookLM – excellent if you upload class notes and want summaries
  • Grammarly – polishing writing and clarity

Imani:

So I don’t need all four?


Nadine:

Baby, no. This is not Pokémon. You do not need to catch them all.

The room laughed again.

Choosing Tools Based on DreamsA middle school student, Kayla, leaned forward.

Kayla:

What if I want to start a lip gloss business?

Several girls snapped their fingers in support.

Nadine:

Now we’re talking entrepreneurship.

She wrote:
BUSINESS IDEA
  • Canva Magic – logos, flyers, product posts
  • ChatGPT – product descriptions, launch ideas, customer messages
  • Gamma – pitch deck if you need sponsors or school funding
  • Perplexity – research trends, competitors, packaging ideas

Kayla:

Wait… I can do that from my phone?


Nadine:

Yes. Never underestimate a focused person with a phone and Wi-Fi.


A Mother Speaks Up
Ms. Johnson:
My daughter wants to use AI, but I worry she’ll rely on it too much.

Nadine nodded seriously.

Nadine:

That’s a wise concern. AI should be a bike, not a backpack.

The room paused.

Ms. Johnson:

What does that mean?


Nadine:

A backpack carries everything for you.
A bike helps you move faster—but you still pedal.

Several mothers nodded.

Real Talk: Cost and Access
Tiana (11th grade):
What if we can’t afford subscriptions? Everything online starts free then suddenly wants $19.99.

The room laughed hard because everyone knew that pain.

Nadine:

Yes. The “free trial trap.”

She wrote:
START FREE. GROW LATER.
  • Use free tiers first
  • Learn one tool deeply
  • Upgrade only when it saves time or creates income
  • Schools and libraries may offer access
  • Share knowledge in community

Nadine:

Do not let expensive branding make you feel behind.


Language, Confidence, and BelongingA quiet girl near the back raised her hand slowly.

Marisol:

Sometimes I feel nervous because my mom speaks Spanish, and I switch between both languages. Online spaces can feel… not for us.

Nadine’s face softened.

Nadine:

Thank you for saying that.

She leaned on the table.

Nadine:

Language is power. Being bilingual is power. Navigating worlds is power. Some platforms were not designed with everyone in mind—but that does not mean they are not for you.

She continued:
Use AI to:
  • translate ideas
  • practice communication
  • build resumes in two languages
  • draft business messages
  • explain concepts in English or Spanish

Nadine:

Never confuse exclusion with inability.

The room got quiet in that meaningful way.

Community Learning in Action
Nadine split the room into small groups.
Challenge:
Pick one real goal and match it with one tool.

Soon the room buzzed:
  • Scholarship applications
  • Starting a tutoring side hustle
  • Organizing church events
  • Managing ADHD homework overwhelm
  • Designing senior photos flyers
  • Learning coding basics
  • Helping grandma track appointments
Nadine moved table to table.
At one table:
Sophia:
We picked ChatGPT for everything.


Nadine:

Respectfully… lazy answer. Go deeper.

Laughter.

Sophia:

Okay okay… Canva for flyers, Otter for meeting notes, ChatGPT for messages.


Nadine:

Now you’re thinking like a strategist.


Introducing the Agent Mindset
Aaliyah (10th grade):
What’s an agent? People keep saying AI agents.

Nadine drew a stick figure with sparkles around it.

Nadine:

An AI agent is simply a system that helps complete tasks with less manual effort.

Examples:
  • Homework planner agent
  • Small business customer reply assistant
  • College scholarship tracker
  • Family schedule helper
  • Content planning assistant
  • Research organizer

Aaliyah:

So… not a robot walking around my house?


Nadine:

No. And if one shows up, call somebody else first.

The room burst out laughing.

Final Wisdom
Nadine looked around the room.
Nadine:
Listen carefully.

Technology is not just for people with perfect resumes, fancy laptops, or industry words.
It is for:
  • daughters with dreams
  • mothers carrying families
  • girls figuring it out in real time
  • people building from limited resources
  • communities solving their own problems
Your first tool is not AI.
Your first tool is:
curiosity
discipline
community
courage

AI just joins the team later.

Reflect & Write
  1. What is one real problem in your life right now?
  2. Which tool might help solve it?
  3. What skill do you need to build confidence using it?
  4. Who in your community can learn alongside you?
  5. What can you create instead of only consume?

Closing Scene
​
As families packed up, girls clustered around Nadine asking:
“Which tool for resumes?”
“What about music?”
“Can AI help me study algebra?”
“How do I build a website?”
“Can my mom use this too?”

Nadine laughed, lifting her tote bag.
Nadine:
Yes. Bring your mothers too. We build better when nobody gets left behind.

Reflect & Prepare: Choosing AI Tools With Purpose

Before the next lesson, choose 5 out of the 20 prompts below and answer them in your journal, workbook, or digital notes. These questions will help you think like Nadine encouraged the group to think: goal first, tool second, action third.
A strong prompt includes Context + Data + Action: your backstory, what you already know or have tried, and the specific thing you want AI to help you do. As you answer, remember Nadine’s reminder that community, culture, language, and shared learning shape how people discover and use tools.
Choose 5 Prompts to Answer
  1. What is one real task, project, or problem in your life right now that you want support with?
  2. Why does this task matter to you, your family, your school, your future, or your community?
  3. What are you trying to create, organize, understand, improve, or complete?
  4. What do you already know about this task, and what have you already tried?
  5. What part feels hardest right now: getting started, staying organized, understanding information, writing, designing, researching, communicating, or finishing?
  6. Which tool from Nadine’s conversation seems most useful for your goal: ChatGPT, Gemini, NotebookLM, Canva Magic, Gamma, Perplexity, Otter, Grammarly, or another tool? Why?
  7. Are you choosing this tool because it matches your goal, or because it feels popular?
  8. What information would you need to give the AI so it does not guess or give you a generic answer?
  9. What should you not share with the AI because it is private, personal, sensitive, or not yours to share?
  10. What language support do you need? Would it help to ask the AI for English, Spanish, bilingual, or plain-language explanations?
  11. Who is the audience for your task: yourself, a teacher, a mentor, a customer, a scholarship committee, your family, or your community?
  12. What tone do you need the AI to use: professional, friendly, encouraging, simple, creative, persuasive, or serious?
  13. What final product do you want: a list, study plan, flyer, script, summary, email, resume bullet, presentation outline, business idea, research question, or schedule?
  14. What does a “good result” look like for this task?
  15. How will you check whether the AI’s answer is accurate, fair, respectful, and useful?
  16. What would you ask a person in your community before trusting or using the AI’s suggestion?
  17. How can this tool help you create something instead of only consuming information?
  18. What free version, school resource, library access, or shared community support could help you explore this tool without spending money?
  19. What is one small first step you can take with the tool in 10–15 minutes?
  20. Write your first practice prompt using this structure:
    Context: Who am I and what am I working on?
    Data: What do I already know, have, or need?
    Action: What do I want the AI to help me do?

Ethics CheckpointBefore pressing enter, pause and ask:
Am I protecting privacy? Am I being clear about my purpose? Am I using AI to support my thinking—not replace it? Am I creating something that respects my voice, my people, and my community?

Click To Add Text

AI TOOL EXPLORATION LABLearning ObjectivesBy the end of this lesson, participants will be able to:
  1. Identify personal goals and match them with appropriate AI tools instead of following hype.
  2. Compare multiple AI tools based on strengths, limitations, cost, privacy, and usefulness.
  3. Write stronger prompts using Context + Data + Action.
  4. Use AI tools to support real-life tasks such as schoolwork, organization, entrepreneurship, communication, creativity, and research.
  5. Evaluate AI outputs critically for accuracy, bias, tone, and usefulness.
  6. Use AI ethically by protecting privacy, respecting authorship, and maintaining human judgment.
  7. Collaborate in community by sharing discoveries, strategies, and lessons learned.
  8. Design a simple AI workflow or agent concept that solves a real problem.
  9. Increase confidence with emerging technology regardless of prior experience or income level.
  10. See themselves as future builders, not just users of technology.

NOW… LET’S TAKE IT TO ANOTHER LEVEL
Welcome to The AI Tool Exploration Lab
Powered by Curiosity, Community & CourageInstead of a normal lesson, participants rotate through 5 immersive stations.
Each station feels like a mini challenge.
Each station solves real-life problems.
Each station centers Latinas, Afro-Latinas, Black women, girls, mothers, and communities.


STATION 1: THE GOAL MATCHER BARPrompt on Wall:
​
What do you need help with right now?
Participants choose life goals:
  • Raise grades
  • Get organized
  • Start side hustle
  • Build confidence
  • Apply for scholarships
  • Create content
  • Help family business
  • Explore careers
  • Reduce stress
  • Save time
Then they match tools:
Goal
Suggested Tools
Writing help
ChatGPT, Gemini
Research
Perplexity, Consensus
Notes from PDFs
NotebookLM
Flyers/social media
Canva
Presentations
Gamma
Meetings
Otter
Resume
Rezi
​Lesson:
The best tool depends on the mission.





STATION 2: PROMPT GLOW-UP STUDIOParticipants are given weak prompts like:
Help me with school.
They transform them into strong prompts:
I’m a 10th-grade student struggling with biology vocabulary. I have a quiz Friday. Please create a 20-minute study plan with memory tricks and simple explanations.
Lesson:Specificity creates better results.





STATION 3: TRUST OR TRASH?Participants review AI outputs and decide:
  • Accurate?
  • Biased?
  • Generic?
  • Useful?
  • Needs editing?
  • Harmful?
Example:AI gives fake scholarship deadlines.
Participants must catch it.

Lesson:AI is powerful—but not wise.





STATION 4: MONEY, ACCESS & REALITY CHECKParticipants discuss:
  • What if I only have a phone?
  • What if I can’t pay subscriptions?
  • What if Wi-Fi is limited?
  • What if English isn’t my strongest language?
Then they build resource strategies:
  • free versions
  • school library access
  • bilingual prompting
  • community sharing
  • offline planning
Lesson:Barriers are real—but strategies are powerful.





STATION 5: BUILD AN AGENT FOR YOUR LIFEParticipants imagine one helpful AI agent.
Examples:
For Students
  • Homework planner
  • Scholarship reminder
  • Essay organizer
For Mothers
  • Appointment tracker
  • Budget helper
  • Meal planner
For Creators
  • Social media planner
  • Content brainstormer
  • Customer reply helper
For Community
  • Event organizer
  • Volunteer coordinator
  • Translation helper
Lesson:AI can serve real people.





THE SURPRISE ELEVATIONTHE FUTURE MIRROR MOMENTParticipants complete this sentence:
“If I truly learned how to use AI with confidence, I could…”Examples:
  • finally organize my life
  • start a business
  • help my mother
  • finish school stronger
  • feel less behind
  • create opportunities
  • become a leader
  • teach others
Then facilitator says:
Technology is not the prize.What it unlocks is the prize.

NADINE’S COMMUNITY CIRCLE CLOSEOUTParticipants share:
1 thing I learned
1 tool I want to test
1 fear I’m releasing
1 future I’m claiming






REFLECTION JOURNALBefore today, I thought AI was ______Now I think AI can ______One way I will stay human-centered is ______
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    Author

    This blog post was created through a collaborative effort, incorporating valuable insights from contributors, prompt engineering and editing by Dr. Jordan, and the assistance of Janiyah GPT and Gemini for generating and refining content.

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    • Careers >
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