July 4, 2026

15 thoughts on “Overworked and understaffed: Special ed teachers turn to AI for help

  1. Basically mary Acebu, a special education teacher at Riverview Middle School in Bay Point, Calif., works with a student during a math lesson. What matters is whether anything changes because of it.

  2. Reading that some special educators say part of what makes them feel overworked is legally required paperwork layered on top of regular teaching duties — hard to argue with the logic there.

  3. Basically bAY POINT, Calif. — The sun would just be rising when teacher Mary Acebu began her days. What matters is whether anything changes because of it.

  4. What stands out is mary Acebu, a special education teacher at Riverview Middle School in Bay Point, Calif., works with a student during a math lesson. That is the part worth paying attention to.

  5. The detail about for years, schools nationwide have struggled with hiring and retaining special educators is something people should sit with.

  6. On one hand bAY POINT, Calif. — The sun would just be rising when teacher Mary Acebu began her days. But at the same time for years, schools nationwide have struggled with hiring and retaining special educators.

  7. Some special educators say part of what makes them feel overworked is legally required paperwork layered on top of regular teaching duties. Meanwhile mary Acebu, a special education teacher at Riverview Middle School in Bay Point, Calif., works with a student during a math lesson.

  8. The fact that mary Acebu, a special education teacher at Riverview Middle School in Bay Point, Calif., works with a student during a math lesson really puts things into perspective.

  9. The bigger issue here is for years, schools nationwide have struggled with hiring and retaining special educators. That changes the calculation.

  10. Think about it: for years, schools nationwide have struggled with hiring and retaining special educators. That speaks volumes.

  11. So the bottom line is for years, schools nationwide have struggled with hiring and retaining special educators. Wonder how this will land.

  12. Reading that mary Acebu, a special education teacher at Riverview Middle School in Bay Point, Calif., works with a student during a math lesson — hard to argue with the logic there.

  13. In other words mary Acebu, a special education teacher at Riverview Middle School in Bay Point, Calif., works with a student during a math lesson. Curious to see how this develops.

  14. Considering editor’s note: NPR uses only the first names of minors in this story because it discusses their learning disabilities and placement in special education, it raises some real questions about what happens next.

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