By Karen Abrams, MBA, AA, Doctoral Candidate
As someone deeply engaged in Guyana’s education sector, I find myself both hopeful and cautious about the growing role of artificial intelligence (AI) in classrooms. The promise is real, AI can level the playing field, offering personalized learning even to students in remote villages. At STEMGuyana, we’ve seen this firsthand through our AI-Integrated Pathway Online Academy. It has provided powerful insights and valuable lessons that have motivated us to continue strengthening our educational model.
Our geography has always presented challenges, long travel distances, limited access to qualified teachers, and inconsistent infrastructure. AI presents a solution. A child in Region 9 could now receive math support as effective as a peer in Georgetown. We’ve deployed AI tutors and adaptive learning tools that give real-time feedback, freeing teachers to focus on deeper, more human aspects of learning. This isn’t just theory; it’s happening at STEMGuyana where learners are engaging in data-driven, context-aware lessons with measurable impact.
The Ministry of Education has rightly emphasized digital transformation and ICT integration in its policies (MOE ICT Policy and Master Plan, 2021). Our national strategy is aligned with Sustainable Development Goal 4, which pushes for quality education for all, and AI is becoming a necessary part of achieving that goal (Education Sector Plan 2021–2025).
However, our experience has also shown us the limits of off-the-shelf AI tools. Too often, students are confronted with unfamiliar cultural references, American references, European history, or expressions that dismiss our local dialects. One of our own challenges at STEMGuyana was finding ways to adapt AI-generated content to reflect Caribbean life, values, and identity.
When an AI assistant flags our vernacular as incorrect or omits regional writers like Wilson Harris or Jan Carew from literature recommendations, we see a risk, our students might become tech-savvy but culturally detached. That’s why we’re investing in creating culturally responsive content that affirms identity while building global competencies.
Education in Guyana is inherently personal. The teacher who believes in a student’s potential, the classroom discussion that stirs critical thought, these are irreplaceable. No algorithm can replicate empathy, intuition, or inspiration.
The Ministry’s Education Sector Plan stresses the importance of holistic development, beyond just academic outcomes (ESP 2021–2025, p. 5). Our work at STEMGuyana supports this too, even while we scale learning through technology, we continue to train facilitators who guide, mentor, and inspire.
Our AI-Integrated Pathway Academy didn’t emerge without growing pains. From internet challenges to content localization, we’ve learned to ask hard questions; Is this tool appropriate for our learners? Does it enhance, not replace, the role of the teacher? Are we reinforcing or undermining cultural confidence?
These lessons have pushed us to rethink our model. We now design with intentionality, placing equal value on digital efficiency and cultural integrity. We believe this approach should guide national efforts too.
Clearly I do not fear AI in education, I fear using it uncritically. If we’re serious about preparing Guyanese students for a complex world, we need tools that are both cutting-edge and culturally anchored. We must lead with human wisdom, allowing AI to amplify, but not define, our educational goals.
At STEMGuyana, we remain committed to building that hybrid future, one where AI serves our communities, reflects our values, and supports our teachers. Because when we shape AI to fit our people, not the other way around, we unlock its true potential.
