George Mason University

06/17/2026 | News release | Archived content

Cora Sula awarded Fulbright to study AI in classrooms in Estonia

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Cora Sula, a third-year PhD student in the Department of Information Sciences and Technology at George Mason University, has been awarded a prestigious Fulbright scholarship to study artificial intelligence (AI) in classrooms in Estonia this fall.

Sula works with Assistant Professor Nora McDonald at the intersection of digital agency, AI and identity. Her recent work examines healthcare privacy and the impact of AI chatbot use on teens' self-concept and well-being-research she presented at CHI 2026 in Barcelona, the world's leading conference in human-computer interaction.

"I am so thrilled at this opportunity to study the impact of AI on classrooms," Sula said. "Estonia is one of the few countries with a national rollout of AI-assisted classrooms."

While AI education initiatives in the United States are expanding, they remain fragmented and locally driven. In contrast, Estonia is pioneering a nationally coordinated approach through its AI Leap program, an initiative led by the Ministry of Education and Research in partnership with OpenAI. The program aims to systematically integrate AI-powered tools into high school teaching and learning.

Sula's Fulbright project will investigate how this national initiative is shaping teachers' professional practices and classroom pedagogy. Using a mixed-methods design-including ethnographic observation, semi-structured interviews, and pre/post surveys-her research will explore how educators navigate both the opportunities and challenges of AI integration.

Her Fulbright will be hosted at Tallinn University of Technology, where she will collaborate with Janika Leoste head of the Creativity Matters Lab and local scholars who bring expertise in digital education and policy.

"This is an amazing opportunity to systematically study how AI will transform classrooms for generations to come," Sula said. "I'm excited to bring what I learn back to my work on AI and teens."

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