Last Night At School Committee
Boston School Committee: 5·6·26 Meeting Recap
Last night’s Boston School Committee meeting was straightforward and relatively mundane, highlights of the evening included conversations about transportation, budgeting, and the district’s effort to prepare for the rapid growth of artificial intelligence in schools. The evening began with a recognition ceremony honoring graduating seniors from the Boston Student Advisory Council. Superintendent Mary Skipper then spotlighted improvements in bus reliability, noting that morning on-time performance climbed from 85% in February to 94% in April, while afternoon performance increased from 81% to 89%. The Committee then approved more than $1.45 million in grants, including a major state rebate supporting the expansion of electric school buses. The district then submitted a request for an additional $22.8 million supplemental appropriation to balance the current fiscal year budget, with officials again pointing to rising health insurance costs, transportation expenses, and special education obligations as major drivers of the deficit. The most forward-looking portion of the meeting came during the district’s presentation of its proposed artificial intelligence policy framework. District leaders described the proposal as a set of guardrails intended to promote ethical, safe, and responsible AI use while ensuring that human judgment remains central to education. Committee members raised questions about academic integrity, overreliance on technology, and the potential loss of foundational skills. The final version of the policy will be voted on and approved in July. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices